Primary election report notice
North Carolina
Political committees involved in only the primary (03/03/2020):
Report | Reporting period [1] | Reg./cert. & overnight mailing deadline | Filing deadline |
---|---|---|---|
Pre-Primary | 01/01/2020 - 02/12/2020 | 02/17/2020 [2] | 02/20/2020 |
48-Hour Notices (candidates only) |
02/13/2020 - 02/29/2020 | n/a | filing info |
April Quarterly | 02/13/2020 - 03/31/2020 | 04/15/2020 | 04/15/2020 |
Political committees involved in both the primary (03/03/2020) and the runoff (06/23/2020) [3], if held:
Report | Reporting period [1] | Reg./cert. & overnight mailing deadline | Filing deadline | Pre-Primary | 01/01/2020 - 02/12/2020 | 02/17/2020 [2] | 02/20/2020 |
---|---|---|---|
48-Hour Notices (candidates only) |
02/13/2020 - 02/29/2020 | n/a | filing info |
April Quarterly | 02/13/2020 - 03/31/2020 | 04/15/2020 | 04/15/2020 | Pre-Runoff | 04/01/2020 - 06/03/2020 | 06/08/2020 | 06/11/2020 |
48-Hour Notices (candidates only) |
06/04/2020 - 06/20/2020 | n/a | filing info |
July Quarterly | 06/04/2020 - 06/30/2020 | 07/15/2020 | 07/15/2020 |
Who must file
The following committees must file the North Carolina Pre-Primary/Runoff Report(s):
- Principal campaign committees of congressional candidates [4] (including unopposed candidates and candidates whose names do not appear on the ballot) who seek election in the primary election must file the above reports and notices. [5]
- PACs and party committees filing on a quarterly basis in 2020 are subject to pre-election reporting if they make previously undisclosed contributions or expenditures (including independent expenditures) in connection with an election by the close of books of the applicable report(s).
Before a committee can stop filing with the FEC, it must file a termination report with the Commission. Committees must continue to file reports until the Commission notifies them in writing that their termination report has been accepted.
Read supplemental filing information:
FOOTNOTES:
[1] These dates indicate the beginning and the end of the reporting period. A reporting period always begins the day after the closing date of the last report filed. If the committee is new and has not previously filed a report, the first report must cover all activity that occurred before the committee registered up through the close of books for the first report due.
[2] Notice that the registered/certified & overnight mailing deadline falls on a weekend or federal holiday. The report should be postmarked on or before that date.
[3] On 03/20/2020, the North Carolina Governor changed the congressional primary runoff election from 05/12/2020 to 06/23/2020. The change was in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
[4] Generally, an individual becomes a candidate for federal office (and thus triggers registration and reporting obligations) when his or her campaign exceeds $5,000 in either contributions or expenditures. If the campaign has not crossed the $5,000 threshold, it is not required to file reports.
[5] If a candidate has more than one authorized committee, the principal campaign committee files a consolidated report on Form 3Z in addition to filing the report on Form 3.