State Auditor Beth Wood has competition in next year’s elections from within her own office: Tim Hoegemeyer, who served as general counsel for the Office of State Auditor, will run for the same job as a Republican.
He spent 12 years in the office, including time leading the Fraud, Waste and Abuse Investigative Division. The Marine Corps veteran appears to be the first and only candidate to challenge Wood, a Democrat, in 2020.
The primary is scheduled for March 3, next year, but the filing deadline is right around the corner: Dec. 20. The general election is Nov. 3, 2020.
Wood, 65, is a CPA with both public service and private practice, and three terms under her belt in her role as auditor in chief for North Carolina. She is the first woman in the office.
Wood was narrowly re-elected to a third term as State Auditor in the 2016 general election in North Carolina over Republican Chuck Stuber by just 6,042 votes out of more than 5 million cast.
Hoegemeyer gave 60 days’ notice, and he was reassigned him to work in the attorney general’s office.
The auditor’s job involves checking on how money is spent in state government. Auditor Office staff in every area of state government look for potential savings and smart use of taxpayer dollars. The office has focused particularly on healthcare spending and contracting practices that favor vendors at the expense of taxpayers.
It’s a four-year term.
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