Updated at 3:35 p.m.
Voters in Wake County will elect a new sheriff in the November general election.
In the July 26 runoff, current by his Democratic challenger Willie Rowe. According to the unofficial results, Rowe received more than 75% of the vote, making him the Democrat party's nominee.
Rowe, a former Wake County deputy, will now face off against former Wake County Sheriff Donnie Harrison, the Republican nominee, on the November ballot.
Rowe, who worked in the sheriff's office for 28 years, had finished ahead of Baker in the seven-candidate May 17 Democratic primary. But he failed to exceed the 30% threshold to win outright, leading to a runoff against second-place finisher Baker, who was first elected in 2018 by defeating Harrison.
Among other duties, the Wake sheriff runs the county's jails, manages pistol permits, serves warrants and polices certain sections of the county.
Baker ran in 2018 primarily on his opposition to Wake’s longtime formal partnership with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in which deputies enforce immigration laws in the jail. Once elected, he cut ties with the 287(g) program.
In Greensboro, the state's third-largest city, incumbent mayor Nancy Vaughn declared victory. But challenger Justin Outling says he will wait until every vote is counted before conceding. According to the State Board of Elections, Outling trails Vaughn .
Greensboro voters overwhelmingly approved bonds for affordable housing, transportation and other projects.
Charlotte mayor Vi Lyles won a third term, as did Fayetteville Mayor Mitch Colvin.
In Cary, Carissa Johnson won an at-large council seat. Incumbent Jack Smith was re-elected in District C.
Voters in more than a dozen municipalities or counties had elections on Tuesday, either to elect new officials or pick party nominees.
Municipal elections are usually held in odd-numbered years, but some were moved to this year because of 2020 census delays. Those results are needed to adjust district boundaries for population changes.