Democratic candidate running against ‘Idol’ star dies suddenly

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ASHEBORO, N.C. (AP) — The entrepreneur who was locked in a too-close-to-call Democratic primary with
former “American Idol” singer Clay Aiken died Monday, his family said.
Keith Crisco, 71, died “after an accidental fall” at his home in Asheboro, about 65 miles west of
Raleigh, according to a statement from his family.
“He was a remarkable man with a tremendous dedication to his family and to public service,” the statement
said.
Aiken was leading Crisco by fewer than 400 votes after the contest last Tuesday. Unless Crisco can come
from behind during a final tally of the votes this week, Aiken will be the nominee, spokesman Josh
Lawson said. If Crisco does win, local Democrats would select the nominee, Lawson said. The vote is
expected to be certified Thursday.
The winner will face Republican incumbent Renee Ellmers in November in the GOP-leaning 2nd Congressional
District.
Crisco had been North Carolina’s top business recruiter for four years under former Gov. Beverly Perdue,
who left office in 2013. Crisco was born to a Republican family on a Stanly County dairy farm in North
Carolina, he said in an interview last month.
“I did pull corn. I did plow. I did milk cows. I did do all the things you do on a small farm,” Crisco
said.
He got a scholarship to study science at the county’s Pfeiffer University. There, he met his wife and her
family of blue-dog Democrats, and Crisco said he converted.
He went to Harvard University to study for a master’s of business administration, which he earned in
1968, then returned to North Carolina to work for textile giant Burlington Industries. In the early
1970s, Crisco was selected as a White House Fellow, and he spent a year in President Richard Nixon’s
Commerce Department.
“Keith came from humble beginnings. No matter how high he rose – to Harvard, to the White House and to
the Governor’s Cabinet – he never forgot where he came from,” Aiken said in a statement. “He was a
gentleman, a good and honorable man and an extraordinary public servant. I was honored to know him.”
In 1986, he and partners formed Asheboro Elastics to produce elastics for home furnishings and medical
and industrial uses. He joked that the company’s mission was to “hold your underwear up.” The company
was renamed AEC Narrow Fabrics and is now run by hired executives, his sons and a son-in-law.
Crisco won a city council seat in Asheboro and said his business background appealed to independents and
Republicans who could help him beat Ellmers in November.
“You cannot win this district with just the Democrat vote. You must have a broad base of support of
independents and, yes, some Republicans. And that’s what I can bring,” Crisco said.

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