North Carolina Democrats are taking a local approach to encouraging voters to vote in the 2024 election.
Fox News Digital spoke with the North Carolina Democratic Party about this term's ground battles. They say they are focused on local messaging and running campaigns in every corner of the state.
“The fact that we take a careful, thoughtful, community-based, community-based approach to everything we do,” Jonah Gerson, First Deputy Leader of the North Carolina Democratic Party, said in an exclusive interview with Fox. The people are reacting to it,” he said in an exclusive interview. “The North Carolina Democratic Party has built an organizational structure that works everywhere, empowering people, people in their own communities, people on committees, who they meet, who they know to vote. ”
The Old North State is one of the key battleground states in the presidential election, and Gerson believes the ground battle will have the biggest impact on the vote.
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Jonah Gerson is the vice chair of the North Carolina Democratic Party. (Fox News Digital)
“We remain focused on running a great ground game because we know that winning against competitive North Carolina won't be some magic abracadabra of dirty headlines and TV commercials,” he said. “It will be a job that North Carolinians will do on the ground, at their doorstep and over the phone.”
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Democrats have been aggressively preparing for their 2024 ground campaign over the past two years, and expect to reach more than 1 million supporters in the state on Election Day.
“To get people informed, we can't just rely on direct contact with voters in the final months of the election period. We need to take the time to carefully plan and scale up,” Gerson said. We need a strategy like this.”

Absentee ballots are being prepared to be mailed on September 17, 2024 at the Wake County Board of Elections in Raleigh, North Carolina. (Alison Joyce/Getty Images)
The party is also focused on reaching people of all parties, not just Democratic voters.
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“There's a lot of work to be done in North Carolina among registered Democrats and registered independents whose values align with the big tent party, the Democratic Party. So this party has all kinds of moderates, progressives, I mean, we've got all these conservatives.''Right now, but frankly, there are some who won't vote and some who won't because they feel alienated from the process or disgusted by what they see coming out of the process. “Deaf,” he said. “And it's about very personal and very honest conversations with people.”
Gerson told Fox that after speaking with voters across the state, most North Carolinians are concerned about their ability to thrive in their local communities going forward.