As election day approaches, voters in North Carolina hope for post-election peace
FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. — When it comes to the instability, discord and fears of violence that loom over the 2022 midterms, John Szoka has a simple solution: put people ahead of politics.
It’s hardly a new or revelatory idea — indeed, it’s precisely the sort of sentiment one might expect from any of the dozens of early voters who filed into this North Carolina polling station on a recent Monday morning.
But Szoka, 68, isn’t just on Cumberland County’s voting rolls. He’s also on the ballot.
“When I talk to individual voters … what they say they want is both parties to work together for the good of the people,” says Szoka, a Republican who has spent the last 10 years as a member of North Carolina’s state assembly.