| North Carolina General Assembly 2003–2004 | |||||
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North Carolina Legislative Building
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| Overview | |||||
| Jurisdiction | North Carolina, United States | ||||
| Meeting place | North Carolina State Legislative Building | ||||
| Term | 2003-2004 | ||||
| North Carolina Senate | |||||
| Members | 50 Senators | ||||
| President pro tempore | Marc Basnight (Dem) | ||||
| Majority Leader | Tony Rand (Dem) | ||||
| Minority Leader | Patrick J. Ballantine (Rep) | ||||
| Party control | Democratic Party | ||||
| North Carolina House of Representatives | |||||
| Members | 120 Representatives | ||||
| Co-Speakers of the House |
James B. Black (Dem) Richard T. Morgan (Rep) |
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| Majority Leader | Joe Hackney (Dem) | ||||
| Minority Leader | Joe L. Kiser (Rep) | ||||
| Party control | Democratic-led power share | ||||
Members of the North Carolina General Assembly, 2003–2004 session were elected in November 2002. The 2002 legislative elections were conducted under an interim redistricting map following the 2000 census; a more permanent redistricting map was passed in November 2003 for use through 2010.
The North Carolina State House, during the 2003–2004 session, consisted of 60 Democrats and 60 Republicans; consequently, Democratic and Republican co-speakers shared leadership of the body.
The North Carolina State Senate, during the 2003–2004 session, consisted of 28 Democrats and 22 Republicans.