After a drawn out election season with a runoff in the Democratic primary for Wake County sheriff and for two seats on the Cary town council, the election results are finally in.
Of the two Democratic candidates running for Wake County sheriff, newcomer Willie Rowe beat incumbent Gerald M. Baker by a landslide. Rowe received 23,763 ballots, or 75 percent of the vote total, while Baker gathered only 7,773 votes according to unofficial results.
None of the seven Democrats vying to lead the sheriffโs office had received 30 percent of the vote in the initial primary in May, prompting Bakerโwho came in with 4,673 fewer votes than Roweโto call for the second primary.
The INDY endorsed Rowe in this election, in part due to Bakerโs mishandling of the Black Lives Matter protests in 2020 in downtown Raleigh and sheriffโs deputies use of tear gas and rubber bullets leveled at demonstrators, among other scandals in the sheriffโs office.
Rowe, on the other hand, is a retired major from the county sheriffโs office with a long record of community service, and says that, within law enforcement, crime can be better prevented by engaging with the community rather than making arrests.
In November, Rowe will face Republican Donnie Harrison, a former longtime Wake County sheriff.
In Caryโs town council election, newcomer Carissa Johnson beat Ken George with 53 percent to Georgeโs 47 percent of the vote for the at-large election. The town councilโs District C saw incumbent Jack Smith winning 55 percent of votes to Renee Millerโs 45 percent.
Cary Town Council member Jack Smith
The INDY did not make endorsements in the Cary town council races in the May primary, but we endorsed both Johnson and Smith in the runoff races earlier this month.

Carissa Johnson
Voter turnout was projected to be low for this election, but unofficial results indicate that it exceeded expectations. In the Wake sheriffโs race, 31,536 Democratic and unaffiliated voters cast ballots (there are 289,620 total registered Democrats and 6,515 unaffiliated voters in Wake county as of July 2022, according to county data). Rowe received only slightly fewer total votes in the second primary than he did in the primary in May (25,731). Baker received far fewer this time around (he received 21,058 votes in May).
And while 10 percent of the electorate turning out isnโt ideal, Democrats should remain diligent about voting as we approach November. As the kind people volunteering at my precinct told me today, how lucky are we to get to vote three times in one year?
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