- Biden’s team sees the state as a pickup opportunity in the general election
- Trump visited the state on Saturday and has vowed to win it again in November
- Trump won state by 75,000 votes in 2020 but it reelected Democratic governor
- Exit polling found nearly eight in ten North Carolina Haley voters did not commit to voting for the GOP nominee in November
- NC Governors race could play key role in the state come November
- NC voters expressed frustrating to DailyMail.com about both Biden and Trump
In Granville Country, North Carolina on Super Tuesday there was a steady stream of voters headed to the polls: Donald Trump voters, Joe Biden voters, and those who said neither of the above.
It was a county Trump won in 2020 by about 2,000 votes. That same election, the Democratic governor Roy Cooper won the county by just over 300 votes – proving parts of the Tar Heel State remain deeply purple.
Now Biden and Trump are headed for another head-to-head matchup in North Carolina that Trump won overall in 2020 by a razor-thin margin but Democrats won statewide down ballot. And voters have mixed feelings on the rematch in the battleground state.
In Oxford, a city in the county, registered Democrat Cindy, 53, voted in the gubernatorial primary for nominee Josh Stein, but she didn’t vote for Biden at the top of the ticket.