North Carolina HD-37
Winn Decker
Winn Decker is a public administration expert from southern Wake County running this November to flip a seat in the North Carolina House.
Candidate Info
Election Info
November 3, 2026
On Social
The Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee (DLCC) is the official Democratic Party committee dedicated to winning the fight for America’s state legislatures.
About Winn
Winn Decker is a public administration expert from southern Wake County running this November to flip a seat in the North Carolina House. Winn’s platform was built by his constituents, for his constituents, and he’s committed to laying a foundation for thriving communities by supporting public schools and working to bring down the cost of living for working families. If Winn is elected, he will be a powerful voice for progress in North Carolina.
Republicans have clung to this district since 2020, but Wake County favored both Vice President Harris and Gov. Stein in the 2024 election by double-digit margins, giving Winn and the DLCC an excellent chance to flip this seat in 2026.
North Carolina
North Carolina is one of the most heavily gerrymandered states in the country, which has allowed an increasingly out-of-touch Republican legislative majority to cling to power for decades, even as Democrats have won elections statewide.Â
In the 2024 elections, Democrats pulled off a major victory by breaking the GOP supermajority in the state House, giving them the power to protect newly-elected Governor Josh Stein’s veto authority. Now, 2026 presents a historic opportunity to gain ground and end the GOP’s gerrymandered supermajorities in both chambers for good.
Democrats in the North Carolina Senate are just one seat away from breaking the GOP supermajority in their chamber, and Democratic candidates in the House are running to put a Republican supermajority even further out of reach. With competitive races for the U.S. Senate and U.S. House alongside these legislative races, the DLCC is all hands on deck to help fund the strong campaigns and infrastructure needed to reach voters and win seats in both chambers in November.