Democrats Deborah Ross and Roy Cooper are leading their respective races for Senate and Governor over their Republican counterparts, according to a recent survey of likely North Carolina voters.
A Bloomberg poll released Monday shows Ross is leading Republican incumbent Senator Richard Burr by a two-point margin at 46/44.
The Senate race in the Tar Heel state has been seen as one of the best chances for Democrats to flip control of the United States Senate from GOP control.
Ross and Burr have been in a tight battle with each leading in different surveys and most results being within the margin for error of each poll.
The Bloomberg poll also showed a six-point lead for Attorney General Roy Cooper in his gubernatorial bid to unseat the Republican incumbent Governor Pat McCrory at 50/44.
The most common answer from those surveyed when asked what the most important issue facing North Carolina right now was overwhelmingly the economy. As many respondents answered the economy as they did the next two topics combined, which were race relations and “laws about accommodations for gay and transgender residents of North Carolina.”
Two of those options may be related as more than half of those surveyed felt that the state’s controversial House Bill 2, which advocates maintain is the worst piece of anti-LGBT legislation in the country, should be repealed. The law has remained in the headlines since being passed in a one-day special session in March as businesses have said they would not expand in the state due to the law. The National Basketball Association, NCAA and Atlantic Coast Conference have also all pulled sporting events from the state over HB2.
The poll surveyed North Carolinians about another law that has been the subject of headlines recently – North Carolina’s Voter ID law, which was struck down as unconstitutional earlier this year. An opinion from the United States Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals condemned the law for targeting African-American voters with “almost surgical precision.” But by a 51/41 margin those surveyed said they felt the law was about addressing voter fraud rather than suppressing black votes.
The Bloomberg survey also had Democrat Hillary Clinton leading the presidential race over Donald Trump in North Carolina.
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