Subscribe
  • Overview
    • Campaign Finance Terms
    • How Lobbying Works
    • Video Tutorials
  • Articles
    • Data Explanation
    • Editorial
    • Lobbying
    • Money Myths
    • Report Highlights
    • Top Viewed Entities
  • Services
    • Add a State
    • Claim Your Page
    • Data Sales
    • FAQ
    • Media Inquiries
    • Our Data on Your Site
  • About
  • Search
    • Advanced
  • Overview
  • Campaign Finance Terms
  • How Lobbying Works
  • Video Tutorials
  • Articles
  • Add a State
  • Claim Your Page
  • Data Sales
  • FAQ
  • Media Inquiries
  • Our Data on Your Site
  • About
  • Search
  • Subscribe
  • Arizona
  • California
  • Florida
  • Indiana
  • Michigan
  • Minnesota
  • North Carolina
  • Ohio
  • Pennsylvania
  • Texas
  • Virginia
  • Wisconsin
  • 2017 To Now
  • 2018 Election Season
  • 2020 Election Season
  • 2022 Election Season
  • Candidates
  • Donors
  • PACs
  • Payees
  • Lobbying
  • Search
  1. Overview
  2. Articles
  3. The results from the most expensive North Carolina Democratic Senate primaries

Follow Us

Related Posts

Timothy Moore raised more than any other Republican House candidate in North Carolina
Hunt raised more than any other Democratic House Rep. in North Carolina
The Top Viewed Names from the Money in North Carolina Politics – Q2 of 2022
North Carolina
Report Highlights
The results from the most expensive North Carolina Democratic Senate primaries
by Joel Williams
05/31/2022

Democratic primary elections for 37 of 50 seats in the North Carolina State Senate took place on May 17, 2022. Of the 37 seats up for election in 2022, seven had a primary election with more than one candidate.

Across all contested Democratic primary elections, candidates raised $1.1 million. Incumbents raised an average of $87,754 per candidate and challengers raised an average of $64,075 per candidate.

Five primary elections with the most fundraising

The table below details the five Democratic primary elections with the most fundraising in the State Senate. Winning candidates’ names are in bold.

District Money Raised Officeholder Candidates
District 19 $482,291 Kirk deViere (D) Val Applewhite, Kirk deViere, and Ed Donaldson
District 23 $340,584 Valerie Foushee (D) Graig R. Meyer and Jamie DeMent Holcomb
District 13 $180,048 Danny Earl Britt (R) Lisa Grafstein and Patrick Buffkin
District 49 $62,326 Julie Mayfield (D) Julie Mayfield, Sandra Kilgore, and Taylon Breeden
District 4 $39,058 Milton F. Fitch Jr. (D) Milton F. Fitch Jr. and Raymond Smith Jr.

#1 District 19 – $482,291

Incumbent Kirk deViere raised $270,326, Val Applewhite raised $211,965, and Ed Donaldson raised $0.

Val Applewhite advanced to the general election with 56 percent of the vote, Kirk deViere received 37 percent of the vote, and Ed Donaldson received 7 percent of the vote.

#2 District 23 – $340,584

Graig R. Meyer raised $251,683 and Jamie DeMent Holcomb raised $88,901.

Graig R. Meyer advanced to the general election with 82 percent of the vote and Jamie DeMent Holcomb received 18 percent of the vote.

#3 District 13 – $180,048

Patrick Buffkin raised $119,790 and Lisa Grafstein raised $60,258.

Lisa Grafstein advanced to the general election with 66 percent of the vote and Patrick Buffkin received 34 percent of the vote.

#4 District 49 – $62,326

Incumbent Julie Mayfield raised $61,481, Sandra Kilgore raised $845, and Taylon Breeden raised $0.

Julie Mayfield advanced to the general election with 68 percent of the vote, Sandra Kilgore received 21 percent of the vote, and Taylon Breeden received 11 percent of the vote.

#5 District 4 – $39,058

Incumbent Milton F. Fitch Jr. raised $19,210 and Raymond Smith Jr. raised $19,848.

Milton F. Fitch Jr. advanced to the general election with 54 percent of the vote and Raymond Smith Jr. received 46 percent of the vote.

The data above are based on campaign finance reports that active North Carolina PACs submitted to the North Carolina State Board of Elections (NCSBE). Federal PACs are not required to report to state agencies. Transparency USA publishes campaign finance data following major reporting deadlines. State or federal law may require filers to submit additional reports.

Report Name Report Due Date
2022 Semiannual 1/28/2022
2022 Q1 Plus 5/10/2022
2022 Semiannual (only candidates not on 2022 ballot) 7/29/2022
2022 Q3 Plus 10/31/2022
2022 Q4 1/11/2023
2022 Year End Semiannual (only candidates not on 2022 ballot) 1/27/2023

This article is a joint publication from Ballotpedia and Transparency USA, who are working together to provide campaign finance information for state-level elections. Learn more about our work here.

Support Our Work
  • About
  • Our Team
  • Contact

Subscribe for Updates

States
  • NC
  • AZ
  • CA
  • FL
  • IN
  • MI
  • MN
  • NC
  • OH
  • PA
  • TX
  • VA
  • WI
  • No elements found. Consider changing the search query.
  • List is empty.