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Few voters expected for Tuesday's runoffs

Five statewide races top the ballot in Tuesday's runoff primary election, but experts expect the turnout to be very low.

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RALEIGH, N.C. — Five statewide races top the ballot in Tuesday's runoff primary election, but experts expect the turnout to be very low.

The runoffs include Republican races for lieutenant governor, superintendent of public instruction, secretary of state and insurance commissioner and the Democratic race for labor commissioner. Nominees for a handful of legislative races also will be decided Tuesday, as will some municipal races in Goldsboro.

"In political science, we talk about low informational elections like lieutenant governor and Council of State races," said Steven Greene, an associate professor of political science at North Carolina State University.

"A runoff like these elections is what we might call a 'super-duper low informational election,' where very few voters are going to make it to the polls and, honestly, very few people have paid attention to any particular campaign," Greene said.

{{a href=story-2"}}The GOP runoff for superintendent of public instruction matches Wake County school board member John Tedesco against special education teacher Richard Alexander.{{/a}} The winner will go up against incumbent June Atkinson.

Former state House co-speaker Richard Morgan of Southern Pines is going up against former insurance agent Mike Causey of Greensboro for the insurance commissioner post. The winner will take on incumbent Wayne Goodwin.

For secretary of state, former Wake County Commissioner Kenn Gardner is running against Chowan County Commissioner Ed Goodwin, with the winner facing incumbent Elaine Marshall.

The only statewide Democratic race is for labor commissioner, with former commissioner John Brooks seeking to regain his old job and lobbyist Marlowe Foster looking for the nod against incumbent Cherie Berry.

Greene said few voters will decide which names appear on the November ballot for half of the 10 members on North Carolina's Council of State.

"We need to rethink how we do these elections, and personally, I think some sort of runoff instant vote would make a lot more sense," he said.

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