
North Carolina Republicans hope that data indicating voters prefer the GOP over Democrats will give them a boost in the 2026 elections.
There are now more registered Republicans than Democrats in North Carolina, the State Board of Elections announced over the weekend. Republicans added 4,318 new voters, while Democrats added 1,637, giving the GOP a net advantage of 2,077 registered voters.
Jason Simmons, chairman of the state Republican Party, said he believes the development marks growing momentum for his side in the coming midterm elections.
“It definitely gives us a structural advantage,” Simmons told the Assembly.
“We saw that last year when we went through the presidential election. Republicans, for the first time, won early voting. That’s in large part because of the structural advantage that we’ve been able to gain, where we’ve had an increase in Republican registration, we turn out our people at a higher level than Democrats or even the unaffiliateds. As we have more Republicans and as we have a higher turnout, that allows us to have that structural advantage going into elections,” he added.
Both parties have already poured massive amounts of funds into this year’s elections. Nearly 20% of the historic $1.87 billion political advertisements aired in 2025 were actually aimed at the midterm elections, according to new data from AdImpact.
Democrats have high hopes for 2026, framing their victories in elections last year as a bellwether for the midterm elections.
Republicans, facing a historical disadvantage, are fighting to stave off gains and hold slim majorities in the House and Senate.
In North Carolina, both parties must grapple with how to reach independents as they fight to clinch outgoing Sen. Thom Tillis’s (R-NC) seat for their side. Nearly 3 million unaffiliated voters now outnumber Democrats and Republicans in the state, accounting for roughly 39% of North Carolina’s electorate.
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When pressed this week on how unaffiliated voter registration is heavily outpacing that of both Democrats and Republicans, Simmons downplayed the threat to his party.
“Well, you have a lot of people that, as they move into the state, they don’t necessarily come with a political allegiance one way or the other, or they just show up to the DMV, and they select the [No Party] box,” he said. “That unaffiliated becomes their default. And so our mission is to continue to reach out to those people that are moving into the state.”