Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine formally accepted the nomination for vice president at the Democratic National Convention on Wednesday. Hillary Clinton’s running mate energized the Philadelphia arena by speaking in Spanish and blasting Donald Trump's cred
">

Told that the N.C. GOP had apologized, N.C. Democratic Party Chair Patsy Keever said, “As well they should. They’re just looking for everything they can to try to make us look bad.” It’s not working, she added.

U.S. Rep. Robert Pittenger, R-Charlotte, called it a “nonissue” in an email.

“People make honest mistakes, and the NCGOP acknowledged their mistake,” he said.

But U.S. Rep. Alma Adams, D-Charlotte, criticized the Republican Party over the tweet. She said she was concerned about how someone residing in a state with the third largest population of military members in the country could mistake a one-star service flag with a five-star foreign flag.

“I thought it was just very inappropriate for them to do that,” Adams said. “… They obviously weren’t educated enough to know and they didn’t try to find out. They immediately started attacking.”

Some 129,049 active-duty military members live in North Carolina, according to Governing magazine. Additionally, 736,000 veterans reside in North Carolina, according to UNC-Chapel Hill statistics.

Woodhouse later posted an in-depth apology on his Facebook account.

“As the executive director of the North Carolina Republican Party, we offer our sincere and unqualified apology for the mistake made on Twitter last night regarding Gov. Kaine’s lapel pin,” he said. “The tweet was wrong on the facts, wrong in tone and should not have happened. We would like to offer a sincere apology to Sen. Tim Kaine, his family and his Marine son who is honorably serving overseas.”

The members of the staff involved with the tweet “are facing severe internal sanctions and mandatory retraining,” Woodhouse said.

The flag pin comment isn’t the only social media mistake that the North Carolina Republican Party has made during the convention season.

The party retweeted a post critical of North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory, a Republican, over House Bill 2, which requires people in government facilities to use bathrooms that match the genders on their birth certificates. The party later deleted the tweet.

July 21, 2016