A longtime Republican and former Capitol Hill staffer says she鈥檚 aiming to run for a North Carolina U.S. Senate seat next year as an independent candidate.
Kimrey Rhinehardt of Pittsboro has started collecting the nearly 83,200 signatures of registered voters she鈥檇 need for her name to be on the ballot in fall 2022. She鈥檚 got 13 months to meet the threshold, according to the State Board of Elections.
Rhinehardt, who runs a consulting firm, told news outlets she officially changed her affiliation a few days after the Jan. 6 Capitol riot by extremist supporters of Donald Trump who tried to stop the certification of Joe Biden's victory. Trump and many Republicans amplified falsehoods about the elections.
"I felt like I had no political home,鈥 Rhinehardt said. 鈥淚 think I鈥檓 on a mission to create one. Not just for me but people who feel the same that I do.鈥
Rhinehardt, 46, hopes to succeed GOP Sen. Richard Burr, who announced several years ago his plans not to seek another term in 2022.
Rhinehardt, who once worked for Burr as a U.S. House staffer, also previously worked as a lobbyist for the University of North Carolina system. She's now also a faculty member at UNC-Wilmington.
Rhinehardt said her campaign will be about 鈥渇inding new voices and offering better choices鈥 for North Carolina voters. She said her beliefs have aligned with both Burr and former UNC system President Erskine Bowles, a Democrat who was once President Bill Clinton鈥檚 chief of staff.
鈥淚 want North Carolina鈥檚 voices to be heard. I don鈥檛 want it to be a party-driven message,鈥 she said.
Several other people have already announced their Senate candidacies, including Democrats Jeff Jackson, Erica Smith and Richard Watkins and Republican Mark Walker.