海角大神

Here鈥檚 what it looks like when voting goes right

From left, Mecklenburg County Board of Elections senior elections specialist James Lockhart, public information manager Kristin Mavromatis, and volunteer Ghazala Johnston review a numerical list of local precincts after polls closed on Nov. 5, 2024.

Ken Makin

November 6, 2024

Hours after the polls had closed in North Carolina, there were traces of blue and red in the uptown skyline. Multicolored lights were draped near the top of the Truist Center skyscraper, and depending on your perspective, the TRUIST marquee almost looked like a prediction for the GOP nominee.

Meanwhile, the Mecklenburg County Board of Elections building looked like uptown Charlotte during rush hour. There were cars streaming in and out, dropping off bags and ballots. Even as major news outlets were poised to announce North Carolina鈥檚 winner, these champions of democracy were still at work.

At the center of it all was a steady hand 鈥 the BOE鈥檚 Public Information Director, Kristin Mavromatis, who has worked in this space since 1996.

Why We Wrote This

As election results came in, one North Carolina county opened its doors to show democracy in action. The election showed how healthy the process is.

鈥淚t鈥檚 still a thrill for us, but this isn鈥檛 my first rodeo,鈥 Ms. Mavromatis said with a confident smile. 鈥淚鈥檝e been here since 4 a.m. 鈥 I wish people would do this at every election, not just the presidential election.鈥

Part of that excitement might have been precarious, if the 2020 presidential election was any indication. It was a time of conspiracy theories and election intimidation that left elections officials on edge. And there was always that possibility this time, too. The fact that Mr. Trump won 鈥 and handily 鈥 undercut potential narratives of conspiracy and fraud.

Why humiliating Iran is unlikely to bring surrender

Instead, this election was allowed to be what it was: A reminder of the remarkable process that fuels American elections without bias 鈥揳nd the remarkable men and women who make that possible. The聽Mecklenburg County Board of Elections building聽was just one of the hundreds of places across the country that made sure voters鈥 voices were heard.

Thankfully, Tuesday night was a lot more calm than 2020.

鈥淲e had some security at certain precincts, and we heard rumors that people left because they didn鈥檛 feel comfortable with the police being there. This is the South,鈥 said Ms. Mavromatis. 鈥淏ut all in all, this was a great day and nothing like 2020. I鈥檓 thankful and grateful.

鈥淵eah, 2020 was bad. ... It was a different time,鈥 she added. 鈥淭his seemed to head back to a place where we didn鈥檛 have the hostility among people, and we鈥檒l just leave it at that.鈥

Somewhere in this democratic 鈥 and oxymoronic 鈥 mix of routineness and uncertainty, there was room for newness. As a host of bright red bags were hoisted onto a nearby desk, one of the election workers on hand yelled, 鈥淓leven!鈥 It wasn鈥檛 a bingo game, but there was a large list with numbers of all of the precincts. It was volunteer Ghazala Johnston鈥檚 responsibility to mark off all 196 precincts as they came in.

Monitor Breakfast

Steve Bannon warns Trump against heavy US involvement in Iran

鈥淚 had a fun job,鈥 she said.

Ms. Johnston, an Iranian-American, was inspired to help at the Board of Elections because of the canvassing she sees every election season.

鈥淎ny time I go into a [campaign] and I see all of the people working there, I鈥檓 kind of inspired by them because they鈥檙e all committed to the job they have,鈥 Ms. Johnston said. 鈥淎nd I always kind of leave thinking, 鈥極h, that would be kind of cool.鈥欌

鈥淵ou鈥檙e interacting with people, you鈥檙e promoting democracy, you鈥檙e doing a really cool civic duty,鈥 she added. 鈥淭his time, I said, instead of talking about it, I鈥檓 gonna actually do something.鈥

She wanted to help out at the polling sites, but her schedule conflicted with the training dates. Fortunately, another opportunity opened up at the main hub.

鈥淢y family and I were immigrants. They came to America when I was 2 years old, so I take a lot of pride in voting,鈥 she said. 鈥淏eing on this side and supporting the democratic process seemed kind of exciting and cool to do. ... I would do it again.鈥