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Tag: New Hampshire

  • Video shows whale capsizing boat off New Hampshire coast, fishermen rescued

    Video shows whale capsizing boat off New Hampshire coast, fishermen rescued

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    Whale capsizes boat off coast of New Hampshire


    Whale capsizes boat off coast of New Hampshire

    02:32

    RYE, N.H. — An incredible video captured the moment a whale off the coast of New Hampshire capsized a boat, sending two men flying into the ocean. Two teenagers nearby, who captured video of the incident, came to their immediate rescue. 

    Two men thrown overboard

    “You know the risk when you come out here, it’s really unusual what happened to us this morning,” said Greg Paquette, who was thrown overboard.

    Paquette and his friend Ryland Kenney were fishing off the coast of Rye, New Hampshire, when a whale suddenly breached and knocked over their boat. 

    “Thankfully it was slow enough that I could kind of swim my way out away from it before it completely capsized,” Paquette said.

    It took Kenney several frantic moments before he could even find Paquette in the water. “Not much time to react,” Kenney said. “So I took a few steps off and basically did a superman off the boat.”

    whale.jpg
    A whale slammed into a boat off Rye, New Hampshire in July 2024.

    Colin Yager


    Two teens, Colin and Wyatt Yager, were fishing nearby when it happened. They said they saw the whale breach a few more times afterwards.

    Colin had his rod in one hand and a phone in the other. “It’s just unreal. Completely unreal,” he said. 

    The whale leaped out of the water, cresting over Paquette and Kenney’s boat. Paquette said the whale had a mouthful of fish and crashed down on the back of their boat, sending them flying. 

    A Coast Guard crew from Station Portsmouth reported that the whale appeared to not be injured. The incident was reported to NOAA.

    “This is their home”

    Fortunately, the men were only in the water for a minute when the two boys came to their rescue.

    “We are grateful to the good Samaritans for taking such quick action to rescue these two individuals. Bravo Zulu!” the Coast Guard said on X

    The men made it out safely — but their belongings not so much. Paquette lost his iPhone. The boat was salvaged, the Coast Guard said.

    “That’s the one thing we got to realize, that this is their home. This is their ocean, so we’re in their way,” Kenney said.

    The Coast Guard asked boaters to report whale sightings to a local USCG command center.

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  • Fears of a Purple Wave in Democratic Strongholds Cast Doubt on Biden’s Campaign

    Fears of a Purple Wave in Democratic Strongholds Cast Doubt on Biden’s Campaign

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    As President Joe Biden’s campaign viability faces new critiques and daily defections, solidly blue states may be shifting toward purple, according to polling and local officials across the country.

    Still months away from the general election, some Democratic leaders and polls show that Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Mexico, and Virginia—all of which Biden won by several percentage points in 2020—are potentially ebbing closer to battleground states for Biden and former president Donald Trump.

    “The dynamics are different in each of the four possible battleground states: Minnesota, for instance, has a knack for voting for third-party candidates, while New Mexico has a large population of Hispanic men, a group that Mr. Biden has struggled to win over,” The New York Times’s Nicholas Nehamas and Kellen Browning wrote on Friday. “But consistent across all four states are widespread fears about Mr. Biden’s age, unhappiness with inflation and electorates that are more closely divided than many national observers realize, according to interviews with local Democratic officials and strategists.”

    This apparent transition of Democratic stronghold states comes after weeks of contentious commotion surrounding Biden’s fitness to lead the party’s ticket—and this country for another four years—following a poor debate performance at the end of June. As of July 12, according to tracking from the Times, 19 representatives, one senator, and a growing number of powerful donors and business leaders have all called on the president to step aside, with even more expressing concern for whether Biden could effectively prevent another Trump administration.

    “I believe the time has come for President Biden to pass the torch,” Representative Mike Levin of California said. “I fear if he fails to make the right choice, our democracy will hang in the balance,” Illinois Representative Brad Schneider said Thursday. “I understand why President Biden wants to run. He saved us from Donald Trump once and wants to do it again,” Peter Welch, the first Senator in the country to push for Biden to drop out, wrote in a Washington Post editorial, “But he needs to reassess whether he is the best candidate to do so. In my view, he is not.”

    Since the immediate fallout from Biden’s poor debate performance, the president has been consistent in his insistence that he is going to stay in the race.

    In a post-debate interview with ABC’s George Stephanopoulos, Biden dismissed concerns that his cognitive health was declining and attempted to use his policy legacy as an assurance of his potential future successes.

    “If you can be convinced that you cannot defeat Donald Trump, will you stand down?” Stephanopoulos asked.

    “If the Lord Almighty comes down and tells me that, I might do that,” later adding, “The Lord Almighty’s not comin’ down.”

    Multiple polls have forecasted a tight nationwide race in November, even with the growing discontent about the Democratic ticket. The latest ABC News/Washington Post/Ipsos poll has Biden and Trump in a tie. A new national NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll found that Biden actually gained a point since last month’s pre-debate survey. And that poll, taken among registered voters, including leaners, puts Biden at 50 percent to Trump’s 48 percent in a two-way presidential matchup.

    State-by-state contests, though, are still causing Democratic leaders to stress.

    A Fox News Poll found that in Virginia, where Biden won by over 450,000 votes in 2020, the race is tied—with the two men each standing at 48 percent. Virginia hasn’t sided with a Republican in two decades, since George W. Bush won reelection in 2004.

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    Katie Herchenroeder

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  • Rowing on the river: Scullers savor the challenges, beauty of the Merrimack

    Rowing on the river: Scullers savor the challenges, beauty of the Merrimack

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    Splash, whoosh, click.

    Splash, whoosh, click.

    Two rowers slide back and forth in the middle of their long skinny boats, gliding over the Merrimack River.

    It’s an eye-catching scene.

    Iconic, too, in that it’s immortalized by American artist Thomas Eakins in his 1871 oil painting “Max Schmitt in a Single Scull,” which depicts his friend on the Schuylkill River in Philadelphia.

    Rowing the single scull, a pleasant and lonely endeavor deeply rooted in this region, endures in competitions and as a niche activity on the Merrimack.

    Here, on a late spring afternoon, each rower works a pair of oars spread wide in oarlocks suspended off the gunwales by riggers.

    The scullers propel themselves upriver on the surface’s broken image of reflected clouds and blue sky.

    They ride over the tidal river, pushing and pulling, Paul Geoghegan, 67, of Merrimac in a blue scull, and Rick Bayko, 76, of West Newbury in a white one.

    They belong to the Merrimack Tidal Rowing Association, a small group that stows its boats, known as sculls or shells, in garage-like bays at Marianna’s Marina in Haverhill.

    It’s downriver from Haverhill’s Basiliere Bridge and upriver from West Newbury. The Groveland Pines Recreation Area lay on a rise directly across the water.

    Years ago, race cars roared there at the Pines Speedway on Saturday nights. If the wind was right, people downriver in West Newbury could hear the engines.

    Geoghegan and Bayko, former track athletes, row together once or twice a week.

    Both like the exercise, peace and solitude that rowing brings.

    “What’s really neat is when you come here on an early Sunday morning and it is completely flat,” Geoghegan said. “There is a little bit of fog on the water and it starts to lift a little bit.”

    Bayko, who was a fine-tuned distance runner for much of his life, recalls trying his hand at rowing once when he was in college in Boston.

    He climbed in a training wherry (a light rowboat) on the Charles River and couldn’t keep the boat straight.

    Storrow Drive was on one side and Memorial Drive in Cambridge on the other. Despite all the Boston traffic and noise, and the frustration built from not keeping the boat steady, he was impressed and surprised by how peaceful it was on the water.

    Association members row when they please, each with a key to the storage bays where the lightweight sculls rest on racks.

    A main draw for the single scull rowers, as well kayakers and canoeists, is getting away for a few hours, retreating to the river.

    “Rowers are solitary,” Geoghegan said. “They like to get together — then go apart.”

    He and Bayko share a few words before they head to the boat launch – a few more at the turnaround spot on the river.

    Right now, as they row, each of them likely has a distinct interior experience.

    Bayko is counting his strokes, checking his time, engaged in a challenge.

    “I enjoy going real fast and hard and feeling that this is well within me,” he said.

    He will feel a sense of accomplishment when he’s done.

    Geoghegan likes to get in a workout and look around.

    Moments after he arrived at the marina this afternoon, he saw a bald eagle flying upriver.

    Osprey and kingfishers are regulars on the Merrimack.

    One day, an endangered species almost joined him in his scull.

    “I pull a stroke,” he said. “I look over my shoulder and I see a sturgeon in the air.”

    The big, prehistoric-looking fish splashed down so close to the boat that Geoghegan got wet. The short-nose sturgeon spawns in Haverhill.

    Rowing has a storied history, the sport evolving from warfare, fishing and transportation.

    The first modern races stem from water taxis ferrying customers, the rowers striving to be first across the Thames River in London, England, Bayko said.

    Some of the first interhigh school and intercollegiate athletic events in the 19th century involved rowing.

    Phillips Exeter Academy in Exeter, New Hampshire, and Phillips Academy Andover in Andover competed, as did Harvard and Yale crew teams.

    The upcoming Olympics Games Paris 2024, which will run from July 26 to Aug. 11, will include single, double and quadruple sculling (a rower operates two oars), and pair, four and eight sweeping (the rowers hand a single oar) events, all at 2,000 meters (1.2 miles).

    Rowing remains popular with youth who compete on high school and college teams, but they typically drift away from it in young adulthood.

    Now, with an aging population — some 20% of Americans are 65 and older — some of the erstwhile rowers return to rowing, men and women.

    Other rowers, Geoghegan and Bayko among them, discover and take up the activity later in life.

    Sculling engages all the muscle groups and is a fluid continuous movement, a strength and cardio exercise without abrupt stops and starts, putting less stress on knees and ankles.

    Geoghegan and Bayko started with indoor rowing on machines about 20 years ago.

    Geoghegan, a longtime skier, was tired of being sore after teaching skiing.

    He started indoor rowing to get in shape for skiing. Then, he discovered outdoor rowing.

    Bayko’s body had taken a pounding from running thousands of miles.

    He fell in love with cross-country running at Newburyport High, Class of 1965. After serving in the U.S. Army, he ran competitively in college, qualifying for the Olympic trials twice. He finished in the top 20 at the Boston Marathon four years in a row in the 1970s.

    Besieged by injuries, he took up indoor rowing at age 52 and held the world record for his age group at 57.

    Upriver, another rowing organization in Lowell named the Merrimac River Rowing Association, hosts the Textile River Regatta in the fall.

    The Head of the Charles Regatta in Boston draws thousands of competitors from around the world over three days in October, where rowers race for the best time.

    Meanwhile, the Haverhill rowers get on the water throughout the year.

    “The river is always different, a different light,” Geoghegan said.

    For more information on the club, contact Paul Geoghegan at merrimackrowers@gmail.com.

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    By Terry Date | Staff Writer

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  • Report: Mass. taxpayer exodus continues

    Report: Mass. taxpayer exodus continues

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    BOSTON — Massachusetts lost more than $3.8 billion in state-adjusted gross income between 2021 and 2022 as residents fled to New Hampshire, Florida and other low-tax states, according to new Internal Revenue Service data.

    The IRS data, based on income tax returns, shows the Bay State lost a net of more than 45,000 residents in the 2021 and 2022 calendar years – taking with them more than $3.9 billion in taxable income. That’s the fifth highest rate of domestic outmigration in the nation following New York, Illinois, New Jersey and California.

    New Hampshire and Florida were the biggest beneficiaries of Massachusetts’ transplants, the IRS data shows. More than 18,189 people moved from New York to Florida, taking $1.4 billion. An additional 23,596 Bay Staters moved to Florida, bringing more than $2.8 billion in income with them, according to the IRS.

    The Pioneer Institute, a Boston-based think tank, says the data shows the largest cohort to flee Massachusetts were 26- to 35 year-olds, with 9,500 more tax filers leaving than coming into Massachusetts in 2022, more than five times the number a decade earlier.

    “This loss of young talent hinders the state’s future innovation and economic growth, which will compound over decades,” said Mary Connaughton, Pioneer’s director of government transparency. “The cost of housing is a leading factor and the recent housing bill is not enough to address this critical challenge.”

    “We need more innovative solutions at the local level to adequately boost the state’s housing supply,” she added.

    The report is the latest in the series that highlights how Massachusetts’ population is shrinking despite a continuing influx of new arrivals, many through immigration.

    Still, the state’s outmigration appears to be slowing, with about 18,000 fewer residents leaving the state in 2023 than in 2022 – a 31% drop, according to the latest census data, released in May.

    Experts say the outmigration has less to do with politics than it does with a lack of housing, prevailing wages and access to employment.

    But federal data shows the population decline has major implications for the states, revenue and tax collections. The state has seen its revenue benchmarks from tax collections fall short over the past year.

    Massachusetts lost an estimated $4.3 billion in state-adjusted gross income in 2020-21 tax year as residents fled to other low-tax states, according to the latest IRS figures.

    On Beacon Hill, state leaders have approved proposals to cut taxes and reduce the state’s high cost of living as part of a broader effort to stop outward migration and make the state more attractive to new families and businesses.

    Gov. Maura Healey, a first-term Democrat, has expressed concerns about the exodus of residents and businesses in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Healey has pointed to a lack of housing as a primary reason people are leaving the state, making the case for expanding stock and making homes more affordable. She acknowledged the impact of the housing crunch on outmigration at an event in Lowell, where she and other officials announced $27 million in tax credits for new housing developments in Salem, Lawrence and Haverhill and other “Gateway” cities.

    “I love New Hampshire, but I want people to stay here in Massachusetts,” Healey said in remarks Tuesday. “I don’t want them going north of the border.”

    But critics point to the state’s high tax burden, including the voter-approved “millionaires tax” that set a new 4% surtax for people with incomes above $1 million a year. They say despite a tax reform package signed by Healey last year, the state needs to do more to ease the burden on residents and businesses.

    Others say concerns about outmigration are overblown and point out that people leave the state for new jobs, college and other reasons other than consternation over high taxes, the cost of living or the lack of affordable homes.

    A 2023 report by the left-leaning policy group Massachusetts Budget and Policy Center says IRS data from 2020 to 2021 shows that Massachusetts has a lower rate of outmigration among high-income households earning $200,000 or more a year than that of low- and middle-income households.

    The report’s authors say that data suggests state tax levels have had “little impact” on the decisions of high-income households.

    Christian M. Wade covers the Massachusetts Statehouse for North of Boston Media Group’s newspapers and websites. Email him at cwade@cnhinews.com.

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    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • Mount Washington race won for record eighth time by Colorado runner Joseph Gray

    Mount Washington race won for record eighth time by Colorado runner Joseph Gray

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    PINKHAM NOTCH, N.H. (AP) — A Colorado runner has won a race to the summit of New England’s tallest peak for a record-setting eighth time. Forty-year-old Joseph Gray of Colorado Springs won the Mount Washington Road Race on Saturday in a time of 1 hour, 2 minutes and 21 seconds. He was followed by Remi Leroux of Waterloo, Quebec; and Eric Blake of West Hartford, Connecticut. Thirty-one-year-old Kayla Lampe of Shelburne Falls, Massachusetts, finished in 1 hour, 15 minutes and 9 seconds to win the women’s division, followed by Laura Manninen of Kuitula, Finland; and Amber Ferreira of Concord, New Hampshire. With a 6,288-foot summit, Mount Washington is synonymous with challenging weather — but conditions were clear.

    Denver 7+ Colorado News Latest Headlines | June 18, 7am

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    The Associated Press

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  • Tickets on sale for Hampstead garden tour

    Tickets on sale for Hampstead garden tour

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    HAMPSTEAD — Hampstead Garden Club members will hold tours of personal gardens and hardscapes in the area from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. on July 13.

    Cookies and light refreshments will be served at some garden sites.

    Hampstead Congregational Church will sell box lunches and offer public restrooms.

    Tickets are $20 and will be sold at Hampstead Public Library two weeks prior to the event as well as at the Hampstead Museum the day of the walk.

    For more Garden Club events open to the public, visit hampsteadgarden.org.

    Pelham trail subcommittee

    PELHAM — Anyone interested in serving on the Trail Subcommittee have until 4 p.m. Wednesday to submit an application.

    On March 12, voters approved the subcommittee’s creation, with appointment by the Pelham Forestry Committee.

    The application is available at pelhamweb.com/employment.

    Those who want to apply can complete the form and drop it off with Melissa Binette at the Selectmen’s Office at 6 Village Green or email mgendreau@pelhamweb.com.

    Free fishing day

    CONCORD — New Hampshire’s free fishing day is June 1.

    On free fishing day, there is no fishing license required to fish anywhere in New Hampshire. Both state residents and nonresidents may participate.

    All other fishing regulations apply and must be followed, including season dates and bag limits.

    For details on fishing rules for various waters, consult the “New Hampshire Freshwater and the New Hampshire Saltwater Fishing Digests,” available at fishnh.com/fishing/publications.html.

    For more information about fishing in New Hampshire, visit fishnh.com/fishing.

    Old Home Day seeks sponsors

    LONDONDERRY — The hosts of the 125th annual Old Home Day from Aug. 14 to Aug. 17 in Londonderry are looking for sponsors to support various activities.

    Sponsors can give donations in different tiers, $150 for bronze, $250 for silver, $500 for gold, $1,000 for platinum, and more than $2,500 for premiere.

    Each tier has different benefits. Bronze has recognition on the Old Home Day Facebook page and on the Old Home Day page on the town website.

    Perks at higher levels include guaranteed booth space on the Town Common with electricity for Saturday’s event, prime locations at the beginning of the parade, and reserved VIP seating for four at Friday’s firework show and food truck alley.

    More information and donation forms visit londonderrynh.gov/oldhomeday.

    Vacation Bible school

    HAMPSTEAD — Island Pond Baptist Church, 26 North Salem Road, will hold this year’s Vacation Bible school, “Breaker Rock Beach,” from 9 a.m. to noon June 24 through June 28.

    All children finishing Kindergarten through fifth grade are welcome. There is no cost for this event.

    To register and for more information, go to islandpondbc.com/vbs2024.

    Contact the office with questions by emailing info@islandpondbc.com or call 603-329-5959.

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  • Ahead of 4/20, Massachusetts cannabis officials remind people making edibles ‘to be careful’ – The Cannabist

    Ahead of 4/20, Massachusetts cannabis officials remind people making edibles ‘to be careful’ – The Cannabist

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    If you’re looking to make some pot brownies at home to celebrate 4/20 this weekend, state cannabis officials want you “to be careful.”

    Ahead of the high holiday on Saturday, the Massachusetts Cannabis Control Commission sent out a reminder to those making edibles.

    “If you are planning to make edibles at home in honor of 4/20 this week, make sure you understand the challenges involved with controlling potency and dosage,” the CCC posted.

    Read the rest of this story on BostonHerald.com.

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    The Cannabist Network

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  • New Hampshire donut censorship and the ‘speech police’: Local bakery sues over ruling that student-painted mural was advertising, not art

    New Hampshire donut censorship and the ‘speech police’: Local bakery sues over ruling that student-painted mural was advertising, not art

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    A New Hampshire town’s new ordinance that was pitched as “a path forward” for public artwork hasn’t resolved a bakery owner’s First Amendment dispute over a large pastry painting, and his lawyer predicts it will only lead to more litigation as town officials become “speech police.”

    Conway residents passed the ordinance by a vote of 1,277 to 423 during town elections Tuesday, part of a lengthy ballot for budget and spending items and picking government positions, such as selectboard, treasurer, and police commissioner.

    The vote came more than a year after the owner of Leavitt’s Country Bakery sued the town over a painting by high school students that’s displayed across his storefront, showing the sun shining over a mountain range made of sprinkle-covered chocolate and strawberry doughnuts, a blueberry muffin, a cinnamon roll and other pastries.

    The zoning board decided that the painting was not so much art as advertising, and so could not remain as is because of its size. At about 90 square feet (8.6 square meters), it’s four times bigger than the town’s sign code allows.

    The new ordinance requires applicants to meet criteria for art on public and commercial property. It says that while the zoning and planning boards must approve the appropriateness of theme, location, and design before the selectboard considers each proposal, the process should make “no intrusion into the artistic expression or the content of work.”

    “There’s no part of writing that where we try to limit any kind of speech,” Planning Board Chairperson Benjamin Colbath said at a March 28 meeting. “We did try to carefully write that and certainly took inspiration from what a lot of other communities are doing as well, as well as confirm with counsel on that one.”

    A lawyer for the bakery had urged voters to reject the ordinance.

    “Typically, people get to decide whether to speak or not; they don’t have to ask the government ‘pretty please’ first,” Robert Frommer wrote last week in the Conway Daily Sun.

    “All commercial property owners would have to get permission before putting up any sort of public art in town,” Frommer wrote, and town officials can “deny murals because of what they depict, or who put them up.”

    Sean Young, the bakery owner, said he was voting NO: “Local officials don’t get to play art critic.”

    Young sued after town officials told him the painting could stay if it showed actual mountains — instead of pastries suggesting mountains — or if the building wasn’t a bakery.

    Young’s lawsuit was paused last year as residents considered revising how the town defines signs, in a way that would have allowed the sign to stay up. But that measure was seen as too broad and complex, and it failed to pass.

    The mural remains in place for now, as his case heads to trial this November.

    Frommer told The Associated Press in an email that the town hasn’t said whether the new ordinance will impact Leavitt’s mural, “and if Sean wanted to paint a different mural with the high school students at any of his businesses, he would have to jump through the ordinance’s unconstitutional hoops.”

    The town’s attorney didn’t immediately respond to an emailed request for comment on Wednesday.

    When Colbath discussed the ordinance at last month’s meeting, he painted it as a way to facilitate more public art in town.

    “There was a hole in our ordinance and I wanted to try to make it clear and an easier path forward for community art,” he said.

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    Kathy McCormack, The Associated Press

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  • Beyond the City: 7 Charming Small Towns in New Hampshire

    Beyond the City: 7 Charming Small Towns in New Hampshire

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    In the heart of New England, New Hampshire is a tapestry of natural beauty and quaint towns steeped in history and tradition. From the serene lakes to the majestic White Mountains, the Granite State offers a peaceful retreat from the hustle and bustle of city life. Whether you’re curious about the charm the small towns in New Hampshire hold, or perhaps considering buying a home in New Hampshire, you’ve landed in the right spot. In this Redfin article, we’ll journey through 7 of New Hampshire’s enchanting small towns. Each town not only showcases the state’s beauty but also its commitment to preserving a sense of community and tradition. Let’s get started.

    1. Hanover, NH

    Median Sale Price: $585,000
    Homes for sale in Hanover, NH | Apartments for rent in Hanover, NH

    Home to Dartmouth College, Hanover offers a blend of academic and outdoor activities. The town boasts numerous trails for hiking and biking, alongside the Connecticut River for kayaking and fishing enthusiasts. Cultural events are abundant, with college-related performances and community gatherings enriching local life.

    2. Exeter, NH

    Median Sale Price: $632,950
    Homes for sale in Exeter, NH | Apartments for rent in Exeter, NH

    Exeter is known for its rich history and the prestigious Phillips Exeter Academy. The town center is lined with historic buildings, unique shops, and eateries. Residents and visitors alike enjoy the Swasey Parkway for leisurely walks and the annual American Independence Festival that celebrates Exeter’s role in the American Revolution.

    3. Hampton, NH

    Median Sale Price: $440,000
    Homes for sale in Hampton, NH | Apartments for rent in Hampton, NH

    Hampton is famed for its beautiful beaches, particularly Hampton Beach, which draws visitors for sunbathing, swimming, and the annual sand sculpture competition. The town’s boardwalk offers entertainment, shops, and seafood eateries. Seasonal festivals add to the charm, making Hampton a beloved spot for both residents and tourists.

    hampton new hampshire at dusk with water view_Getty

    4. Durham, NH

    Median Sale Price: $545,000
    Homes for sale in Durham, NH | Apartments for rent in Durham, NH

    As the home of the University of New Hampshire, Durham is a lively college town with an exciting spirit. The town offers a variety of dining and shopping options, as well as access to the Great Bay for water activities. Community events, such as the UNH Wildcats games, bring residents together throughout the year.

    5. Milford, NH

    Median Sale Price: $367,500
    Homes for sale in Milford, NH | Apartments for rent in Milford, NH

    Milford, known as “The Granite Town,” has a quaint downtown area with a classic New England feel. The Oval, the town’s central square, hosts various community events, including the annual Pumpkin Festival. Milford’s mix of natural beauty and historic architecture makes it a charming place to live or visit.

    autumn-new-hampshire

    6. Amherst, NH

    Median Sale Price: $846,000
    Homes for sale in Amherst, NH | Apartments for rent in Amherst, NH

    Amherst is celebrated for its well-preserved historic district and the annual July 4th festivities that draw crowds from across the state. The town’s Baboosic Lake offers recreational opportunities, from swimming to kayaking. The closeness of Amherst’s community is evident in its local farmers’ market and the numerous volunteer-driven events held year-round.

    7. Hooksett, NH

    Median Sale Price: $515,000
    Homes for sale in Hooksett, NH | Apartments for rent in Hooksett, NH

    Hooksett offers a mix of suburban living and natural landscapes, with easy access to both Manchester and Concord. The town’s Robie’s Country Store, a historic site, symbolizes Hooksett’s rich history. Outdoor enthusiasts enjoy the local hiking trails and the Merrimack River for fishing and boating activities.

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    Jenna Hall

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  • Written in Granite: Economic growth puts pinch on local housing

    Written in Granite: Economic growth puts pinch on local housing

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    NASHUA, N.H. — Mayor Jim Donchess gave his State of the City Address inside City Hall chambers last week. The popular city official was upbeat throughout his 30-minute address and shared encouraging news about the Gate City.

    “Nashua is strong and growing. Our population is on the rise after decades of no growth. Our economy is robust with jobs available. Nashua’s finances are Triple A-rated. Our city and our neighborhoods are safe. Our downtown is thriving. We are fortunate to be living in Nashua in 2024, and I am looking forward and optimistic to Nashua’s future.”

    The mayor touched upon a variety of topics, and housing was one of them. The shortage of housing is a significant challenge, he said, stating that the vacancy rate for apartments is currently at one-half of 1%. The average price of a single-family home has risen to $437,000, according to Zillow.

    The mayor explained that our housing shortage has come about because of an outgrowth of Nashua’s strong economy, our desirable location within the Boston metro area and people wanting to move here and raise a family.

    Donchess says that his administration is working hard on bringing more affordable housing and market-rate housing to Nashua. He listed his latest accomplishments, including the Lofts 34 on Franklin Street, Riverside Landing near the Hudson Bridge, Monahan Manor at Central Street, 22 units at the former Indian Head Bank building on Main Street and150 units of workforce housing at the corner of Marshall and East Hollis Streets.

    In addition, 150 new apartment units will be opening this week at The Flats on High Street in the downtown. Mayor Donchess says that this building has stunning views of the city and will be great for young people to take occupancy in.

    Nashua’s skyline is looking very different these days as more tall apartment buildings and others fill in the vertical open spaces, giving the city a very sophisticated, modern appearance.

    I give Mayor Donchess and city officials high marks on moving Nashua forward, but I have some concerns about my hometown.

    I’m not sure how many “regular” folks will be able to afford living here in the future. Nashua is an old, proud, mill city with humble roots, and it’s beginning to look “fancy.” Are we attracting the right kind of residents? Can we keep a balanced market?

    Nashua property taxes are ridiculously high, and rents have soared once again. For example, The Flats on High Street are not cheap for most “young people.” The layouts look gorgeous online.

    Studio:

    $1,790

    1ba, 518 sq. ft.

    One Bedroom:

    $2,125

    1ba, 705 sq. ft.

    Two Bedroom:

    $2,600

    2ba, 1055 sq. ft.

    It’s not only Nashua. It’s a tough housing market across the entire state.  According to a 2022 report from New Hampshire Housing, a household would need an annual income of around $74,000 to afford a two-bedroom unit at the average monthly rate of $1,858 in Hillsborough County.

    In that report, it also mentioned that “47% of New Hampshire renter households are paying 30% or more of their household income on rent.”

    It’s not easy for those who desire to purchase a home because there’s a limited supply here, especially at a price that most first-time home buyers can afford. This makes it challenging for renters to become homeowners. That, in turn, keeps rental vacancy levels low because “people will rent longer if they cannot buy a home in their price range.”

    A sign (and sigh) of the times. A new Nashua, perhaps.

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    Joan T. Stylianos

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  • In South Carolina, Nikki Haley’s Bill Comes Due

    In South Carolina, Nikki Haley’s Bill Comes Due

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    The afternoon before Donald Trump’s blowout win in South Carolina’s primary, Shellie Hargenrader and Julianne Poulnot emerged from a rally for the former president bubbling with righteous conviction.

    They had spent the previous hour listening to the candidate’s son Donald Trump Jr. regale supporters at the campaign’s headquarters in an office park outside Charleston. The crowd had been energized, frequently calling out in response to his words as if at a church service, while Trump Jr. lacerated President Joe Biden, the media, the multiple legal proceedings against his father, and the punishment of the January 6 insurrectionists. “Trump is my president,” one man shouted.

    Hargenrader and Poulnot were still feeling that spirit when they stopped on their way out from the rally to talk with me. When I asked them why they were supporting Trump over Nikki Haley, the state’s former governor, they started with conventional reasons. “Because he did a great job and he can do it again,” Hargenrader told me. Poulnot cut in to add: “He stands for the people and he tells the truth.”

    But within moments, the two women moved to a higher plane in their praise of Trump and condemnation of Haley. “I think the Lord has him in the chair,” Hargenrader told me. “He’s God’s man.” Poulnot jumped in again. “And the election was stolen from him,” she said. “You have to live on Mars to not realize that.” And Haley? “I think she’s an opportunist and … she sold her soul to the devil,” Poulnot told me.

    Such is the level of evangelical fervor for Trump within much of the GOP base that buried Haley in her home state on Saturday. Haley had said her goal in South Carolina was to match the 43 percent of the vote she received in last month’s New Hampshire primary, an exceedingly modest aspiration. But she appeared to fall short of even that low bar, as Trump routed her by a tally of about 60 percent to 40 percent, at the latest count.

    Trump’s victory in South Carolina placed him in a virtually impregnable position for the nomination. Since South Carolina established its primary near the front of the GOP calendar in 1980, the candidate who won here has captured the Republican nomination in every contested race except one. With his win tonight, Trump became the first GOP contender other than an incumbent president to sweep the big three early contests of Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina.

    Reinforcing the message from the key initial contests of Iowa and New Hampshire, the South Carolina result showed that Haley faces a ceiling on her support too low to beat Trump. For Haley to catch Trump now would require some massive external event, and even that might not be enough.

    But for all the evidence of Trump’s strength within the party, the South Carolina results again showed that a meaningful floor of GOP voters remains uneasy with returning him to leadership. “I like his policies, but I’d like to cut his thumbs off and tape his mouth shut,” Juanita Gwilt of Isle of Palms told me last night just outside Charleston, before Haley’s final rally leading up the primary. In Haley’s speech to her supporters, she insisted that she would remain in the race. “I’m an accountant. I know 40 percent is not 50 percent,” she said. “But I also know 40 percent is not some tiny group. There are huge numbers of voters in our Republican primaries who are saying they want an alternative.”

    As in Iowa and New Hampshire, Trump’s pattern of support in South Carolina simultaneously underscored his dominant position in the party while pointing to some potential vulnerabilities for the general election. In this deeply conservative state, Trump carried virtually every major demographic group. Trump beat Haley, for instance, by nearly as much among women as men and by nearly as much among suburban as rural voters, according to the exit polls conducted by Edison Research for a consortium of media organizations. The robust overall turnout testified again to Trump’s greatest political strength—his extraordinary ability to motivate his base voters.

    Still, some warning signs for him persisted: About one-third of all primary voters and even one-fourth of self-identified Republicans said they would not consider Trump fit for the presidency if he was convicted of a crime. More than four in five Haley voters said he would be unfit if convicted, about the same elevated share as in Iowa and New Hampshire. And as in the earlier states, Trump faced much more resistance among primary voters with a college degree than those without one, and among voters who did not identify as evangelical Christians than those who did. (The exit polls showed Haley narrowly carrying both groups.) As in both Iowa and New Hampshire, Trump won only about two in five independents in South Carolina, the exit polls found.

    The magnitude of Trump’s victory was especially striking given the mismatch in time and money the two candidates devoted to the state. Haley camped out in South Carolina for most of the month before the vote, barnstorming the state in a bus; Trump parachuted in for a few large rallies. Her campaign, and the super PACs supporting her, spent nearly $9.4 million in South Carolina advertising, about nine times as much as Trump and his supporters, according to data provided by AdImpact.

    In South Carolina, Haley also delivered a case against Trump that was far more cogent and cohesive than she offered earlier in the race. During the multiple nationally televised Republican debates through 2023, Haley barely raised a complaint about Trump. Through Iowa and New Hampshire—when she had the concentrated attention of the national media—she refused to go any further in criticizing Trump than declaring that “chaos follows him, rightly or wrongly.”

    But after allowing those opportunities to pass, she notably escalated her challenge to Trump over the past month in her South Carolina rallies and a succession of television appearances. This morning, after she voted near her home in Kiawah Island, reporters asked her about some racist comments Trump made last night at an event in Columbia. In her response, no trace remained of that passive voice. “That’s the chaos that comes with Donald Trump,” she said firmly, now clearly describing him as the source of the chaos rather than a bystander to its eruption. “That’s the offensiveness that is going to happen every day between now and the general election.”

    Yesterday, at a rally in Moncks Corner, a small town about an hour north of Charleston, Haley delivered a biting critique of Trump’s comments that he would encourage Russia to invade NATO countries that don’t meet the alliance’s guidelines for spending on their own defense. “Trump is siding with a thug where half a million people have died or been wounded because [Russian President Vladimir] Putin invaded Ukraine,” she said. “Trump is siding with a dictator who kills his political opponents. Trump is siding with a tyrant who arrests American journalists and holds them hostage.”

    A few minutes later, Haley lashed Trump for questioning why her husband, who is on a military deployment, has not appeared with her during the campaign. “Donald Trump’s never been near a uniform,” she said. “He’s never had to sleep on the ground. The closest he’s ever come to harm’s way is if a golf ball happens to hit him on the golf course.” Later, she criticized Trump for using tens of millions of dollars in campaign contributions to pay his own legal bills. And she insisted that he cannot win a general election.

    Haley remains careful to balance every criticism of Trump with an equal jab at Biden. But though she portrays both Biden and Trump as destabilizing forces, the core of her retooled message is a repudiation of Trump’s insistence that he will make America great again. No, she says, the challenge for the next president is to make America normal again. “Our kids want to know what normal feels like,” she insisted in Moncks Corner.

    Taken together, this is an argument quite distinct from the case against Trump from Biden, or his sharpest Republican critics, including former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie and former Representative Liz Cheney. Haley doesn’t join them in framing Trump as a threat to democracy or an aspiring autocrat. The refusal to embrace that claim as well as the staunch conservatism of her own agenda and her repeated indications that she’ll likely support Trump if he wins the nomination probably explains why Haley failed to attract as many independent and Democratic voters as she needed to participate today. Those non-Republicans cast only about 30 percent of the total votes, according to the exit polls. That’s about the same share as in both the 2016 and 2012 South Carolina primaries, and far less than the nearly 40 percent share then-Senator John McCain turned out in his “maverick” 2000 presidential bid against George W. Bush. (And even with that, Bush beat him by consolidating a big majority of partisan Republican voters, as Trump did earlier today.)

    Instead, in South Carolina, Haley offered a case against Trump aimed more directly at wavering Republicans. She accused Trump of failing to display the personal characteristics that conservatives insist they value. It’s telling that at Haley’s rallies yesterday, she drew almost no applause when she criticized Trump on policy grounds for enlarging the federal deficit or supporting sweeping tariffs. But she inspired cries of disdain from her audience when she disparaged Trump, in so many words, as a grifter, a liar, and a self-absorbed narcissist more focused on his own grudges than on his voters’ needs. “Poor guy,” one man yelled out last night after Haley complained about Trump constantly portraying himself as a victim.

    Would it have made any difference if Haley had pressed these assertions earlier in the race, when she had the large national audience of the debates, and Trump had not progressed so far toward the nomination? Several GOP strategists and operatives this week told me that attacking Trump while the field was still crowded would only have hurt Haley and benefited the other contenders who stayed out of the fray. Even now, in a one-on-one race, directly confronting Trump is rapidly raising Haley’s negative rating among GOP voters. Whit Ayres, a veteran GOP pollster, told me as the results came in Saturday night that GOP voters who voted for Trump twice might take it as a personal insult about their own prior decisions if Haley echoed Christie and Cheney in portraying the former president as “unfit for office and a threat to democracy.”

    Hargenrader and Poulnot underscored Ayres’s point yesterday: They speak for millions of Republican voters who see Trump in quasi-religious terms as uniquely fighting for them, and the legal challenges ensnaring him only as evidence of the burdens he’s bearing on their behalf. “I don’t think people appreciate sufficiently the fine line Nikki Haley has to walk with this coalition,” Ayres told me.

    After months of vacillation and caution, Haley is now making a forceful case against Trump, and displaying great political courage in doing so: She is standing virtually alone while most of the GOP establishment (including virtually all of the political leadership in South Carolina) aligns behind him. Ayres believes that Haley is speaking for a large enough minority of the party to justify continuing in the race for as long as she wants—even if there’s virtually no chance anymore that she can expand her coalition enough to truly threaten Trump. “Nikki Haley represents a perspective, an outlook on the world, and a set of values that are still held by what remains of the Reagan-Bush coalition in the Republican Party,” Ayres told me.

    But the bill for treating Trump so gingerly for so many months has now come due for Haley in South Carolina. Haley waited until the concrete in this race had almost hardened before giving Republican voters a real reason to think twice about nominating Trump again. Perhaps the circle of GOP voters open to an alternative was never large enough to support a serious challenge to the former president. What’s clear after his decisive victory in South Carolina is that neither Haley nor anyone else in the GOP tried hard enough to test that proposition until it was too late.

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    Ronald Brownstein

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  • Could South Carolina Change Everything?

    Could South Carolina Change Everything?

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    For more than four decades, South Carolina has been the decisive contest in the Republican presidential primaries—the state most likely to anoint the GOP’s eventual nominee. On Saturday, South Carolina seems poised to play that role again.

    Since the state moved to its prominent early position on the GOP presidential-primary calendar in 1980, the candidate who has won there has captured the nomination in every contested race except one. Given Donald Trump’s overall lead in the GOP race, a victory for him in South Carolina over Nikki Haley, the state’s former governor, would likely uphold that streak.

    “We all underestimate how deeply ingrained the Trump message is in the rank and file of our party,” Warren Tompkins, a longtime South Carolina–based GOP strategist and lobbyist, told me. “Take the personality out of it: What he stands for, what he says he’ll do, and what he did as president; he’s on the money.”

    This year, though, there may be a twist in South Carolina’s usual role of confirming the eventual GOP winner: Even as the state demonstrates Trump’s strength in the primary, it may also spotlight his potential difficulties as a general-election nominee. Like the first contests in Iowa and New Hampshire, South Carolina may show that though most Republican voters are ready to renominate Trump, a substantial minority of the GOP coalition has grown disaffected from him. And in a general-election rematch, that could provide a crucial opening for President Joe Biden, despite all of his vulnerabilities, to attract some ordinarily Republican-leaning voters.

    “Trump is essentially the incumbent leader of the party who is not able to get higher than, say, 65 percent” in the primaries, Alex Stroman, a former executive director of the South Carolina Republican Party, told me.

    Local observers say Haley has run a textbook South Carolina campaign, barnstorming the state in a bus, appearing relentlessly on national television, spending heavily on television advertising, and notably intensifying her criticism of Trump as “unhinged” and “diminished.” Trump, meanwhile, has breezed through the state as quickly as a snowbird motoring down I-95 from New York to Florida for the winter. Yet he has retained an imposing lead reaching as high as two to one over Haley in the polls.

    “I think you can argue Haley is running a fantastic campaign” in South Carolina, Jordan Ragusa, a political scientist at the College of Charleston and a co-author of a history of the South Carolina primary, told me. “But the pool of available voters is just so small that no matter what she does, it’s going to be hard for her to move the needle.”

    Over the past generation, South Carolina has had an extraordinary impact in shaping the outcome of GOP presidential-nomination contests. The state moved near the front of the GOP primary calendar in 1980, when Republicans were just establishing themselves as a competitive force in the state. GOP leaders created the primary, with its unusual scheduling on a Saturday, as a way to generate more attention for the party, which had previously selected its delegates at a convention attended by party insiders.

    The other key factor in creating the primary was support from Ronald Reagan’s presidential campaign, including Lee Atwater, a prominent GOP strategist then based in South Carolina. South Carolina did what Atwater hoped when Reagan won it in a rout, after unexpectedly losing the Iowa caucus to George H. W. Bush.

    Reagan’s victory in South Carolina placed him back on the path for the GOP nomination and cut a mold that has endured, with only one exception, in every contested GOP presidential-primary race through 2016. Each of those races followed the same formula: One candidate won the Iowa caucus, a second candidate won the New Hampshire primary, and then one of those two won South Carolina and eventually captured the nomination. (The exception came in 2012, when a backlash to a debate question about his marriage propelled Newt Gingrich to a decisive South Carolina win over Mitt Romney, who recovered to claim the nomination.)

    In 2016, Trump’s narrow victory in South Carolina effectively cemented the nomination for him after he had lost Iowa to Senator Ted Cruz of Texas and then recovered to win in New Hampshire. A victory for Trump on Saturday would allow him to equal a feat achieved only by incumbent GOP presidents: sweeping Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina.

    Three factors, above all, explain South Carolina’s enduring influence in the GOP race. One is that it reflects the overall Republican coalition better than either of the two states that precede it. In Iowa, the Republican electorate leans heavily toward evangelical Christians who prioritize social issues; in New Hampshire, where there are few evangelicals, economic conservatives focused on taxes and spending, as well as a sizable group of libertarian voters, have dominated. South Carolina is the synthesis of both: It has a large evangelical population and a substantial cohort of suburban, business-oriented Republicans outside its three principal population centers of Greenville, Columbia, and Charleston.

    “In a lot of ways, the state party here is a microcosm of the national party,” Jim Guth, a longtime political scientist at Furman University, in Greenville, told me. “We replicate the profile of the national party maybe better than New Hampshire [or] Iowa.”

    It has been possible for candidates over the years to win Iowa or New Hampshire primarily by mobilizing just one group, such as social conservatives in Iowa and moderate independents in New Hampshire. But because the South Carolina GOP contains so many different power centers, “you have to have a broader appeal,” Tompkins, who has worked in every GOP presidential primary since Reagan, told me.

    The second key factor in South Carolina’s importance has been its placement on the GOP calendar. From the outset, in 1980, the primary was designed by its sponsors as a “First in the South” contest that they hoped would signal to voters across the region which candidate had emerged as the favorite. As more southern states over the years concentrated their primaries on Super Tuesday, in early March, that multiplied the domino effect of winning the state.

    “Given the demographic alignment between South Carolina and a lot of the southern Super Tuesday states, and the momentum effect, it really made South Carolina pivotal,” Ragusa said.

    The third dynamic underpinning South Carolina’s influence has been its role as a fire wall against insurgent candidates such as John McCain in 2000 and Patrick J. Buchanan in the 1990s. South Carolina’s Republican leadership has usually coalesced predominantly behind the candidate with the most support from the national party establishment and then helped power them to victory in the state. That model wavered in 2012, when Gingrich won his upset victory, and even in 2016, when Trump won despite clear splits in the national GOP establishment about his candidacy. But most often, South Carolina has been an empire-strikes-back place where the establishment-backed front-runner in the race snuffs out the last flickers of viable opposition.

    All of these historic factors appear virtually certain to benefit Trump this year. Super Tuesday no longer revolves as much around southern states. But it remains a huge landscape: 15 states and American Samoa will all pick a combined 874 Republican delegates on March 5, nearly three-fourths of the total required to win the nomination.

    In the limited polling across the Super Tuesday states, Trump now leads, usually commandingly, in all of them. Haley has already announced campaign appearances in Super Tuesday states through next week. But with all of the Super Tuesday states voting just 10 days after South Carolina, it will be virtually impossible for Haley to close the gap in so many places at once without winning her home state or at least significantly exceeding expectations. Like earlier underdogs, she faces a stark equation: To change the race anywhere on Super Tuesday, she must change it everywhere through her showing in South Carolina.

    Saturday’s result could also reconfirm South Carolina’s other key historic roles. Trump is now the candidate of most of the GOP establishment—a dynamic reflected in his endorsement by virtually all of the leading Republicans in Haley’s home state. He’s also become the contender with the broadest appeal inside the Republican Party. Because Trump is so polarizing for the general public, it’s difficult to see him in that light. But South Carolina is likely to buttress the indications from Iowa and New Hampshire that Trump, as a quasi-incumbent, now has a broader reach across the Republican Party than Haley does, or, for that matter, than he himself did in 2016. In most South Carolina polls, Trump is now leading her with every major demographic group, except among the independents who plan to participate in the primary.

    Yet South Carolina, like Iowa and New Hampshire before it, will also provide important clues about the extent of the remaining resistance to Trump within the Republican coalition.

    Haley is likely to perform best among well-educated voters around the population centers of Columbia and Charleston. “Haley must run up the score with traditional Reagan Republicans who want to actually nominate a candidate who can win in the general election,” Stroman told me. “She is going to be absolutely swamped in the MAGA-rich right-wing upstate, and in rural areas across the state—so she needs the suburbs and cities to turn out to hopefully keep her closer than expected.”

    In New Hampshire, Haley finished closer to Trump than most polls projected, because a large number of independent voters, and even a slice of Democrats, turned out to support her.  She’ll need a similar dynamic to finish credibly in South Carolina, where she has said her goal is to exceed her 43 percent of the vote in New Hampshire. The better the showing for Haley among independents, and among college-educated voters in the suburbs, the stronger the general-election warning signs for Trump.

    Democratic voters could be a wild card on Saturday after relatively few of them turned out for the party’s own primary earlier this month. South Carolina does not have party registration, which means that any voter who did not participate in the Democratic primary can vote in the Republican contest. A group called Primary Pivot has launched a campaign to encourage Democrats and independents to swarm the GOP primary to weaken Trump. If Haley exceeds expectations in South Carolina, it will be because, as in New Hampshire, more independents and Democrats turn out for her than pollsters anticipated.

    Besting Trump for the nomination may no longer be a realistic goal for Haley if she loses her home state. But, after mostly dodging confrontation with Trump for months, she is now delivering a more cogent and caustic argument against him, and showing a determination to force Republicans to wrestle with the general-election risks they are accepting by renominating him. The biggest question in South Carolina may not be whether Haley can beat Trump, but whether the state provides her more evidence, even in defeat, to make that case.

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    Ronald Brownstein

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  • Black man operated printing press for New Hampshire’s first newspaper

    Black man operated printing press for New Hampshire’s first newspaper

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    I’M AMY LU ALL RIGHT, AMY, THANK YOU. AS PART OF BLACK HISTORY MONTH, WE ARE TAKING A LOOK AT SOME OF THE SPOTS THAT YOU CAN VISIT ALONG THE BLACK HERITAGE TRAIL OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. THE NEW HAMPSHIRE GAZETTE, FOUNDED IN 1756, USED TO SIT ON THE CORNER OF HOWARD AND WASHINGTON STREETS IN PORTSMOUTH. THE ORIGINAL BUILDING IS NO LONGER THERE. NOW. A MAN NAMED PRIMUS WAS AMONG A GROUP OF SKILLED AND ENSLAVED PEOPLE WHO WORKED FOR THE OWNER OF THE GAZETTE, PRIMUS OPERATED TH

    Black man operated printing press for New Hampshire’s first newspaper

    As part of Black History Month, WMUR is showcasing spots people can visit along the Black Heritage Trail of New Hampshire.The New Hampshire Gazette, founded in 1756, used to sit on the corner of Howard and Washington streets in Portsmouth.However, the original building is no longer there.A man named Primus was among a group of skilled enslaved people who worked for the owner of the Gazette.Primus operated the printing press for New Hampshire’s first newspaper.

    As part of Black History Month, WMUR is showcasing spots people can visit along the Black Heritage Trail of New Hampshire.

    The New Hampshire Gazette, founded in 1756, used to sit on the corner of Howard and Washington streets in Portsmouth.

    However, the original building is no longer there.

    A man named Primus was among a group of skilled enslaved people who worked for the owner of the Gazette.

    Primus operated the printing press for New Hampshire’s first newspaper.

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  • Biden skips visit to South Carolina for presidential primary, stops in L.A. instead

    Biden skips visit to South Carolina for presidential primary, stops in L.A. instead

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    South Carolina held the first official Democratic presidential primary Saturday. But as the polls closed, President Biden was 2,400 miles away, in Los Angeles, stepping off Air Force One.

    Biden’s victory in the Palmetto State was a foregone conclusion, and his campaign invested significant time there leading up to the primary.

    So Biden headed west. He and First Lady Jill Biden landed at LAX around 3:30 p.m. on Saturday and were greeted by Sen. Alex Padilla and Rep. Maxine Waters before the president choppered to the Santa Monica Airport and his wife left separately for an event.

    It’s unclear what they did while in Los Angeles. They had no public events, and there were no fundraisers known to be taking place.

    Biden had an afternoon campaign meeting at a historic Bel Air estate owned by director George Lucas.

    Biden’s son Hunter lives in Malibu, and Sunday is his 54th birthday. Hunter Biden is a favorite target of the president’s Republican critics and faces federal tax charges.

    The Biden campaign did not respond to a request for comment.

    Republicans predictably grumbled about Biden’s decision not to visit South Carolina on Saturday, which they claimed was a slight by the incumbent.

    “It just goes to show you how much he cares about actually coming and how serious he’s taking it,” said Abby Zilch, spokeswoman for the South Carolina Republican Party. “He and Kamala have spent the last three months coming down to South Carolina, telling South Carolina Democratic voters how much they’re grateful for their party here and how much South Carolina means to them. Yet he was all the way across the country on the day of the Democrats’ first primary.”

    Shortly after Air Force One landed at the Los Angeles International Airport, news broke that Biden had easily won the South Carolina primary.

    The state saved his 2020 presidential campaign after he was trounced in Iowa and New Hampshire and finished a distant second in Nevada. An endorsement from Rep. James E. Clyburn (D-S.C.) and the enthusiastic support of Black voters in the state gave Biden an overwhelming victory and provided momentum heading into the Super Tuesday primaries, which were critical to him becoming the Democratic nominee.

    In return, the Democratic National Committee, at Biden’s behest, overhauled the 2024 nominating calendar, officially making South Carolina the first state to hold a primary. The move was ostensibly meant to give a greater voice to diverse voters in the early stages of the race, compared with caucuses and a primary in overwhelmingly white Iowa and New Hampshire; it was largely viewed as a gift to South Carolina for saving Biden’s 2020 campaign.

    The president, Vice President Kamala Harris and other Democrats, including Gov. Gavin Newsom, have spent considerable time in South Carolina promoting the Biden campaign.

    On Friday, Harris spoke to supporters at South Carolina State University, a historically Black college. After a drumline performed, Harris was introduced by the reigning Miss South Carolina State and touted the administration’s efforts to cancel student loan debt, cap insulin costs and boost the economy.

    “President Biden and I are guided by a fundamental belief: We work for you, the American people. And every day, we fight for you,” she said. “Sadly, however, that is not true for everyone. Case in point: Donald Trump. Former President Trump has made clear time and time again: His fight is not for the people. He fights for himself.”

    Scott Huffmon, a political science professor at Winthrop University in Rock Hill, S.C., noted the frequency of visits by Democrats and their surrogates, including Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff, who visited his home county on Friday.

    “This is repayment for what South Carolina did for Joe Biden, but on a larger scale, South Carolina is so stunningly important to the national Democratic presidential process that keeping this relationship tight and warm is incredibly important,” Huffmon said.

    He added that he doesn’t think most Palmetto State Democrats would have a problem with Biden spending primary night in Los Angeles, given South Carolina’s rightward tilt in the general election. Trump easily carried the state in the 2020 presidential election. The last time a Democrat won there in the general election was 1976, and the candidate was a fellow Southerner, Jimmy Carter.

    “He’s paid his fealty. He’s done his bows and curtsies, and now realism sets in. He’s not going to win South Carolina in November,” Huffmon said. “So the repayment of the debt has happened. Now reality sets in.”

    Indeed, on Sunday, Biden heads to campaign events in Nevada, which is holding its Democratic primary Tuesday and is pivotal to his reelection bid.

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    Seema Mehta

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  • PolitiFact – Dean Phillips didn’t win the NH primary. He said so himself.

    PolitiFact – Dean Phillips didn’t win the NH primary. He said so himself.

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    Mickey Mouse, Santa Claus and Joe Biden — they’re now all common write-in candidates after this year’s New Hampshire Democratic primary, which President Biden won with more than 79,000 write-in votes.

    But it didn’t take long for social media accounts to allege that his win was a result of election fraud.

    “SOURCE: Rep. Dean Phillips received almost twice as many votes as Biden did in the New Hampshire primary,” read a Jan. 24 post on X. “The Democrat Party, in an effort not to embarrass the president, ‘found’ 50,000+ write in votes for Biden to give him the ‘win’.” 

    A day later, the post had been reshared by X users 7,100 times and viewed more than 4 million times.

    The unsubstantiated claim was first shared by the popular X account @amuse. With its stormtrooper profile pic and almost 300,000 followers, the account claims to support “independent journalists” and deliver “conservative takes on liberal talking points.” 

    The account owner also writes “Politique Republic,” a Substack blog; the author description reads “a political dissident, pundit, author, and artist.” 

    (Screenshot of X post)

    Rep. Dean Phillips, D-Minn., who announced his candidacy in October 2023, did not get more votes than Joe Biden nor win the primary election. Results posted on the New Hampshire secretary of state’s website as of Jan. 26 show that Phillips received about 24,000 votes while President Biden got over 79,000. 

    A few hours after the account shared its unsourced claim, Phillips himself debunked it. “This is shameful and absolutely untrue,” wrote Phillips on X. “The State of New Hampshire manages its elections with great integrity and efficiency, and Joe Biden won the NH Democratic primary election last evening fair and square.”


    (Screenshot of X post)

    New Hampshire’s secretary of state, Republican David Scanlan, administers Granite State elections. Political parties are allowed observers in polling places, but those observers do not count ballots, said Bradford E. Cook, attorney and chairman of the state’s Ballot Law Commission, a bipartisan body established by the Legislature. Election officials and volunteers count votes and relay results to the secretary of state.

    Separately, New Hampshire’s attorney general sends observers to polling places “to observe and assure the vote is being done according to law.” Cook said.

    Anna Sventek, Scanlan’s communications director, confirmed that the results reported on the website were “the accurate results of the election.” 

    Amuse’s claim mimics other false claims that large numbers of votes were “found” in the 2020 election.

    Why Biden wasn’t on the ballot

    The New Hampshire Democratic primary was unique this year because the presumptive nominee, Biden, did not appear on the ballot. This was because of a disagreement between the state and national party after the Democratic National Committee reordered the primary schedule to make South Carolina the first primary state instead of New Hampshire.

    New Hampshire state law dictates that its primary must be first in the nation, so the state went ahead with its Jan. 23 primary, despite the DNC’s change. As a result, no Democratic delegates from the state will be awarded at the convention later this year.

    Because of the change, Biden did not campaign in New Hampshire, leading his supporters to organize a write-in campaign on his behalf. 

    Write-in votes can take longer to be reported because they must be hand-counted. Many precincts prepared for the large number of write-in ballots from Biden supporters.

    Because of this, the secretary of state and attorney general said in January that “to the extent that counting the write-in votes takes longer than expected, the moderator may release the Republican results earlier than the Democratic results provided the results are complete.”

    Votes were not found, said Cook, “but added to the total as they were reported to the secretary of state.”

    Our ruling

    An X post claimed Rep. Dean Phillips, D-Minn., received twice as many votes as Joe Biden in the New Hampshire Democratic primary. But official results from the secretary of state show President Joe Biden won the election with a large number of write-in votes.

    We rate this claim Pants on Fire!



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  • Elise Stefanik’s Trump Audition

    Elise Stefanik’s Trump Audition

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    Elise Stefanik and I had been speaking for only about a minute when she offered this stark self-assessment: “I have been an exceptional member of Congress.”

    Her confidence reminded me of the many immodest pronouncements of Donald Trump (“I would give myself an A+”), and that’s probably not an accident. Stefanik has been everywhere lately, amassing fans among Trump’s base at a crucial moment—both for the GOP and for her future.

    Stefanik spent October presiding over the leaderless House GOP’s search for a new speaker—a post that Stefanik, the chair of the conference, conspicuously declined to seek for herself. In a congressional hearing last month, she pressed three of America’s most prominent university presidents to say whether they’d allow students to call for Jewish genocide; directly or indirectly, her interrogation brought down two of them. And for the past several weeks, Stefanik has been making an enthusiastic case for Donald Trump’s return to the White House.

    She campaigned with him in New Hampshire last weekend, defending his mental acuity in the face of obvious gaffes (“President Trump has not lost a step,” she insisted) and rejecting a jury’s conclusion that he sexually abused E. Jean Carroll. She parrots his baseless claims that the 2020 election was “rigged” and that the defendants charged with storming the Capitol to keep him in office are “hostages.” After a GOP congressional candidate was caught on tape mildly criticizing Trump, Stefanik publicly withdrew her endorsement. Barely an hour after the networks declared Trump the winner of the Iowa caucus—before Iowans had even finished voting—she issued a statement calling on his remaining opponents to drop out of the race.

    I spoke with Stefanik about her fierce defense of Trump, which has won her praise from the former president. In New Hampshire, he called her “brilliant” and lauded her questioning of the university presidents as “surgical.” (He did, however, butcher her name.) Just about everyone can see that Stefanik has been mounting an elaborate audition. The 39-year-old clearly didn’t pass up a bid for House speaker because she lacks ambition. On the contrary, she seems to have a bigger promotion in mind: not second in line to the presidency, but first. In our conversation, Stefanik didn’t make much effort to dispel the perception that she wants to be Trump’s running mate. “I’d be honored to serve in any capacity in the Trump administration,” she told me, repeating a line she’s used before.

    Her displays of fealty aside, Stefanik has a lot going for her. She has become, without question, the most powerful Republican in New York, where her prodigious fundraising helped give the GOP a majority. Stefanik’s House GOP colleagues say she is extremely smart, and she still draws compliments for her behind-the-scenes role during last fall’s speakership crisis, when she ran a tense and seemingly endless series of closed-door conference meetings. Whether or not her declining to run for speaker was tied to the vice presidency, it was politically shrewd. “It didn’t work out well for most others,” joked Representative Patrick McHenry of North Carolina, who briefly served as acting speaker and similarly turned down a chance to win the job permanently. “She saw the writing on the wall,” a fellow New York Republican, Representative Andrew Garbarino, told me. “She was smart enough to say, ‘I’m not popping my head up only to get it chopped off.’”

    The fervor that Stefanik brings to her Trump defense has made her a favorite for VP among some of his staunchest allies, including Steve Bannon, who remains a force in MAGA world. “She’s a show horse and a workhorse, and that in and of itself is pretty extraordinary in modern American politics,” Bannon told me. “She’s at, if not the top, very close to the top of the list.”

    Stefanik may not be subtle, but she’s made herself relevant in a party still devoted to Trump. Her future success now depends on his—and whether he rewards her loyalty with the prize she so clearly wants.

    Stefanik routinely boasts that she was the first member of Congress to endorse Trump’s reelection. That’s true as far as 2024 goes, but it neatly obscures the fact that she did not back his primary campaign in 2016. Nor did she show much support for Trump’s movement as it took root in the GOP.

    After graduating from Harvard, Stefanik began her political career in the George W. Bush White House and later served as an aide to Paul Ryan during his vice-presidential run. In 2014, at age 30, she was elected to the House—the youngest woman ever elected to Congress at the time—and carved out a reputation as a moderate in both policy and tone. She made an abrupt turn toward Trumpism during the former president’s first impeachment hearings, in 2019, and eagerly backed his reelection the following year. In 2021, she replaced the ousted Trump critic Representative Liz Cheney as conference chair, making her the fourth-ranking Republican in the House.

    Not one for public introspection, Stefanik has never fully explained her transformation into a Trump devotee beyond saying she was impressed by his policies as president. The simplest answer is that she followed the will of her upstate–New York constituents, who came to embrace Trump after favoring Barack Obama in 2008 and 2012. “I reflect, I would say, the voters in my district,” she told me shortly before the 2020 election.

    To say that Stefanik displays the zeal of a convert doesn’t do justice to the phrase. She has become one of Trump’s foremost defenders and enforcers in Congress. At first “it was surprising,” former Representative Adam Kinzinger, a Republican colleague of Stefanik’s for eight years, told me of her Trump pivot. “Now it’s just gross.”

    Kinzinger and Stefanik had both served as leaders of a group of moderate House Republicans, but they took opposite paths during the Trump years. Kinzinger voted to impeach Trump after January 6 and left Congress two years later. “In her core, she’s a deep opportunist and has put her personal ambition over what she knows is good for the country,” Kinzinger said. Although Stefanik has been in Trump’s corner for more than four years now, Kinzinger said she “has ramped up her sycophancy” as the chances of Trump’s renomination—and the possibility of her serving on the national ticket—have come more fully into view.

    Close allies of Stefanik naturally dispute this characterization; they told me that although they think she’d make an excellent vice president, she has not once brought up the topic with them. “He’s going to have great options, but Elise will be at the top of that list,” Majority Leader Steve Scalise told me. When I asked Stefanik whether she was campaigning to be on Trump’s ticket, she replied: “I’m focused on doing my job.”

    Other contenders frequently mentioned as possible Trump running mates include South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem; Arkansas Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders, who served as one of Trump’s White House press secretaries; Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina; and the businessman Vivek Ramaswamy.

    One senior Republican who is friendly with both Stefanik and Trump lauded her leadership skills and political acumen but doubted that Trump would pick her. “She doesn’t have executive experience,” the Republican told me, speaking on the condition of anonymity to talk candidly about Stefanik’s chances. A Trump-campaign spokesperson did not return a request for comment.

    Even as they praise her, Stefanik allies occasionally describe her in ways that suggest she lacks authenticity. “She’s a highly intelligent, calculated individual,” Chris Tague, a Republican in the New York legislature, told me. Representative Marc Molinaro, a member of New York’s House delegation, described Stefanik as “a calming force” inside a House Republican conference often marred by infighting. When I noted that this characterization seemed to be at odds with her combative style in public, Molinaro explained that Stefanik’s “outward persona” helps her keep the conference from getting out of hand. “We all know Elise. She’s strong. She’s tough,” he said. “She didn’t need to be that person, because we know she can be that person.”

    Still, Kinzinger said, unlike some Republicans in Congress, Stefanik does not speak differently about Trump in private than she does in public. “I got that wink and nod from a lot of people, not from her,” he said. “She’s smart enough to know that if she says something in private, it could get out.”

    Stefanik is also smart enough, Kinzinger told me, to understand that Trump’s claims about the 2020 election, which she now recites, are not true. “She knows the drill,” he said. “She would say exactly what I would say if she had the freedom to do it, but she’s all in.”

    To interview Stefanik is to strike a sort of deal: access in exchange for browbeating. She answered my questions even as she rebuked me for asking about such trifling matters as election denialism and January 6. “Everyday Americans are sick and tired of the biased media, including you, Russell, and the types of questions you’re asking,” Stefanik told me. I started to ask her about her recent appearance on Meet the Press, where she had casually referred to the January 6 defendants as “hostages”—an unsubtle echo of Trump’s language. The comment prompted a predictable round of shocked-but-not-surprised reactions from Democrats and anti-Trump Republicans. A New York Democrat, Representative Dan Goldman, introduced a resolution to censure Stefanik over the remark.

    Even though Stefanik made a show of protesting my line of inquiry, she beat me to the question. I had barely uttered “Meet the Press … ” before she started speaking over me: “I know—you’re so predictable—what you’re going to ask. You’re going to ask about the January 6 hostages.” Bingo. Without missing a beat, Stefanik proceeded to read aloud snippets from New York Times and NPR reports about poor conditions and alleged mistreatment of inmates charged with January 6 crimes. “The American people are smart. They see through this,” she said. “They know that there is a double standard of justice in this country.”

    Stefanik was trying to argue that these news reports justified her use of a term usually reserved for victims of terrorism. The specifics of the reports weren’t really the point. More than anything, she seemed to want to demonstrate that, like Trump, she wouldn’t back down or apologize. She sounded almost cheerful, like a happy warrior for Trump—his pugnacious defender who would engage with the biased mainstream media without giving in to them, without conceding a single premise or hemming and hawing through an interview.

    Stefanik was riding high in MAGA world when we spoke. Her Meet the Press appearance was “a master class,” Bannon told me. In addition to the “hostages” line, she refused to commit to certifying the 2024 election, generating outrage that only added to the performance. “This is what we’re thinking. This is us. This is who we are,” Susan McNeil, a GOP county chair in Stefanik’s district, told me, referring to Stefanik’s comments about certification. “Do I trust this election right now? No.”

    “For her to stand strong and make those statements? Good. You’re not being bullied,” McNeil continued. “You’re not gonna get pressured to cave in to saying something that you’re not ready to dignify with an answer yet.”

    Stefanik has no interest in appearing humble or self-deprecating. When I brought up the Meet the Press interview, she used the same word that Bannon had to describe her performance. “It was a master class in pushing back” against the media, she told me, “and it has been widely hailed.”

    Cooperating with this story, like appearing on the D.C. establishment’s favorite talk show, seemed to be part of Stefanik’s unofficial, unacknowledged audition for VP. It was a low-risk bet. A positive portrayal might impress the media-conscious Trump. If, on the other hand, she didn’t like how the piece turned out, she could hold it up to Trump supporters as confirmation that the press has it out for them. Stefanik’s team lined up nearly a dozen local and national validators to speak with me, including Bannon, Scalise, and Representative James Comer, who heads the committee leading the Biden-impeachment inquiry.

    Trump clearly prizes loyalty above just about anything else. Mike Pence displayed that quality in spades, until suddenly, at the most climactic moment of Trump’s presidency, he did not. To test whether Stefanik’s allegiance had a limit, I asked whether a Trump conviction for any of the crimes with which he’s been charged would affect her support in any way. “No,” she replied without hesitation. “It’s a witch hunt by the Department of Justice. I believe Joe Biden is the most corrupt president not just in modern history, but in the history of our country.”

    Stefanik was more circumspect when I asked her what she would have done differently from Pence had she been responsible, as vice president, for presiding over the certification of Electoral College ballots on January 6. Trump had pressured Pence to throw out ballots from states where he was contesting the vote. Pence had refused. Given Stefanik’s apparent interest in Pence’s old job, it seemed relevant.

    At first, she dodged the question by claiming that the election was rigged and referring to a speech she delivered on the House floor in the early hours of January 7, when she voted against certifying Biden’s victory in Pennsylvania. But that speech was worded far more carefully than the outright claims of fraud that Stefanik makes today. Back then, she couched her objections as representing the views of her “concerned” constituents. She didn’t say the election was stolen, nor did she say what action Pence should have taken.

    When I pressed her on Pence’s decision not to intervene and what she would have done, Stefanik replied simply, “I disagreed, and I believe it was an unconstitutional election.” She would go no further than that.

    At some point over the next several months, Stefanik’s dual roles as Trump booster and protector of the vanishing House majority could come into conflict. She has made clear that she wants Republicans to unify around Trump, and sooner rather than later. Control of the House, however, might well be determined in her deep-blue state, where the nation’s most vulnerable Republicans represent districts that Trump lost in 2020. Embracing Trump this fall could cost some of them their seats.

    Now the longest-serving Republican in the New York delegation, Stefanik serves as a mentor for several of the state’s more recent arrivals to the House. She has helped get them seats on desired committees, and, during the speaker battle in October, she arranged for the various candidates to sit for interviews with the delegation. But Stefanik has also worked to keep them in line.

    “She’s not afraid to be blunt,” Garbarino said, recalling times when Stefanik chastised him for a public statement she didn’t like. Her message? “We don’t have to do everything publicly,” Garbarino said. “Sometimes it’s better if you say this stuff behind the scenes to somebody instead of smacking them in the face publicly about it.”

    Stefanik has taken the lead in fighting Democratic attempts to gerrymander New York in their favor, part of an effort to reclaim the House majority. (A recent state-court ruling didn’t help her cause.) To that end, she is working to ensure that none of the state’s GOP House members tries to save their own seat at the party’s expense or says anything in public that could undermine a potential Republican legal challenge. “She’s cracking the whip,” one Republican strategist in the state told me, speaking on the condition of anonymity.

    Stefanik’s toughest task, though, might be getting her colleagues to support Trump. Two swing-district Republicans in New York, Representatives Nick LaLota and Brandon Williams, have endorsed Trump as he easily captured the first two primary states. But others in the delegation have yet to heed Stefanik’s call. In interviews, a few of them seemed hesitant even to utter his name. “I have avoided presidential politics, and Elise has always respected that,” Molinaro told me. As for Trump, he would say only, “I intend to support the presidential nominee.”

    Garbarino used almost exactly the same words when I asked about the presidential race. Two other New York Republicans in districts that Biden won, Representatives Mike Lawler and Anthony D’Esposito, declined interview requests. When I asked Stefanik if they would back Trump, she offered a guarantee: “They’re going to support President Trump, who will be the nominee, as Republicans will across the country.”

    Privately, Stefanik has delivered an additional message to vulnerable Republicans in New York, according to several people I spoke with. “Stefanik has been very clear to not attack President Trump,” the GOP strategist said. “Everyone knows that in New York.” As Stefanik sees it, criticizing Trump would hurt even swing-district Republicans, because the MAGA base is now a sizable constituency in districts that Biden carried. Still, other House leaders haven’t exerted nearly as much public pressure on rank-and-file Republicans. “We all each individually take different approaches to growing our majority,” Scalise told me. “I don’t tell anybody how to manage their politics back home.”

    As Stefanik’s profile has grown, and as her rhetoric has become even Trumpier, Democrats have sought to turn her into a political liability for swing-district Republicans, just as they have the former president. After Stefanik’s “hostages” comment, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, who also hails from New York, said that Stefanik “should be ashamed of herself.”

    But then he pivoted to a political angle. “The real question,” Jeffries told reporters, “is why haven’t House Republicans in New York, like Mike Lawler or others, denounced Elise Stefanik, and why do they continue to rely on her fundraising support in order to try to fool the voters in New York and pretend like they believe in moderation?” None of the New York Republicans took the bait, choosing to remain silent rather than cross Stefanik. (“I didn’t see the clip,” Garbarino told me, in one characteristic dodge.)

    Stefanik clearly welcomes these attacks. In the MAGA world she now inhabits, enraging Democrats is the coin of the realm. Taking their fire only pushes her closer to the place she really wants to be: at Trump’s side.

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    Russell Berman

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  • 14 states are cutting individual income taxes in 2024. Here are where taxpayers are getting a break.

    14 states are cutting individual income taxes in 2024. Here are where taxpayers are getting a break.

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    Are you ready for 2024 tax season? Experts breaks down what you need to know before filing


    Are you ready for 2024 tax season? Experts breaks down what you need to know before filing

    05:47

    Taxpayers in 14 states could get some financial relief this year thanks to lower individual tax rates enacted in 2024, according to an analysis from the Tax Foundation, a think tank that focuses on taxes.

    The reductions represent a continuation of “tax cut fever,” as termed by the left-leaning Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (ITEP). The drive to cut state taxes began during the pandemic when many states found themselves flush with tax revenue. With coffers fat, lawmakers sought to provide some relief to their constituents, typically through tax rebates or rate reductions.

    The states that are reducing taxes in 2024 tend to be controlled by Republican lawmakers, although there are some Democratic-controlled states that are also jumping on the tax cut bandwagon. Connecticut, for one, is reducing its tax rates for low- and middle-income residents, while keeping its highest marginal rate unchanged. 

    Lowering tax rates can help make a state more competitive, potentially drawing remote workers and businesses within their borders, noted Manish Bhatt, senior policy analyst with the Center for State Tax Policy at the Tax Foundation.

    “The last few years have been incredibly fast-paced in the world of tax rate cuts, and they are to find a competitive edge over either neighboring states or around the country,” Bhatt told CBS MoneyWatch. 

    That logic begs the question of whether people and businesses are incentivized to move in pursuit of lower tax rates. The evidence is mixed: While some researchers have found that Americans shifted to low-tax states in recent years, it could be that some of those taxpayers moved because they were in search of a new job, better weather or lower housing costs. 

    Other research has found little evidence that lower tax rates drive migration. For instance, even if people move to lower-tax states, they are often replaced in their higher-tax states by new people moving in, noted the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities in a 2023 research paper. 

    Red state tax cuts

    Many of the tax cuts will benefit the states’ richest residents, with 12 of the 14 states reducing their top marginal rate, or the tax rate that impacts their highest earners.

    Take Arkansas, which is reducing its top marginal rate to 4.4% in 2024, from 4.7% last year. To be sure, the top marginal rate applies to any taxpayer earning more than $24,300, or about 1.1 million residents — a broad base of low-, middle- and high-income earners, according to the Arkansas Advocate. 

    But about 70% of the tax cut’s benefit will be enjoyed by the 20% richest households in the state, or those earning more than $264,000 annually, the newspaper noted, citing data from ITEP. 

    In the eyes of Arkansas Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the cut will help draw people to the state. If you are “a young family looking for a new place to settle down, moving to Arkansas has never been better,” Sanders said when signing the bill to lower tax rates last year, the Arkansas Advocate reported.

    There are also longer-term issues that could tarnish the allure of tax cuts. For instance, these tax-cutting states could face a financial pinch when a recession hits — which could lead to hits to essential services, from education to road maintenance. 

    One such example of a tax cut that backfired occurred in Kansas over a decade ago. In 2012, state lawmakers cut income tax rates for top earners by almost one-third and reduced some business taxes to zero. The idea was that lower taxes would kickstart economic growth. 

    Instead, the state was forced to slash spending on services, including education, and the state actually underperformed neighboring states economically. Eventually, the tax cuts were reversed.

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  • What Nikki Haley (Maybe) Learned in New Hampshire

    What Nikki Haley (Maybe) Learned in New Hampshire

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    “Everybody’s waiting to write my obituary.”

    This is never a good thing for a candidate to be saying on Election Day.

    But Nikki Haley, the candidate, was trying—pleading—to make a larger point to CNN’s Dana Bash as they sat on raised chairs in the middle of Chez Vachon, the landmark coffee shop and makeshift TV studio on the west side of Manchester, New Hampshire.

    “We had 14 candidates,” Haley said, referring to the number of people who were seeking the Republican nomination a few months ago. “It’s now down to two”—Haley and Donald Trump. “That’s not an obituary; that’s somebody who’s a fighter.”

    Fair enough. Haley was indeed still here and showing up, which is something to be proud of. She is the last woman standing between the former president and an unimpeded romp to the Republican nomination. This was Haley’s “closing argument” as she made her final rounds in New Hampshire yesterday, greeting volunteers at polling places, doing interviews, and hitting the tables at Chez Vachon. She would keep fighting and continue to flout the naysayers who have trailed her for her entire career. Underestimate me is the message printed on one of Haley’s favorite T-shirts. That’ll be fun.

    Almost immediately after the polls closed, a few hours later, networks declared Trump the New Hampshire winner. His margin of victory over Haley, however, looked smaller than expected. “THIS RACE IS OVER,” Trump insisted in a text blasted out to his supporter list just after 8 p.m. Nope, Haley told her Election Night revelers in Concord, vowing to persist as the campaign moved to her home state of South Carolina. “New Hampshire is first in the nation. It’s not last in the nation,” she said in her speech. “This race is far from over.”

    I spent much of December and early January watching Haley campaign for the job she quite clearly has been aspiring to for years. She proved to be disciplined and polished, good enough to outlast the battalion of male challengers arrayed alongside her—“the fellas,” as she has lately taken to calling her rivals, many of whom endorsed Trump as they fell away. She has claimed repeatedly to be part of a “two-person race” against Trump, despite finishing third in Iowa behind him and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis.

    This felt like wishful thinking at times, but it is unquestionably true now and will present Haley with what’s been a recurring dilemma of her candidacy: How hard will she be willing to campaign against Trump? Will she be as noxious and ornery as the former president surely will be against her? Will she be willing to attack Trump and seize the ample vulnerabilities he provides, even if it risks his unrestrained ire?

    Haley was hesitant to go after him when the field was more crowded. She offered only the mildest of critiques—that “chaos follows” Trump “rightly or wrongly” and that he was not “the right president” for these times (as he was before). But it was hardly a sure thing that Haley would deploy her best material against Trump—about his odd behavior and mental capacity and legal problems.

    The final days of the New Hampshire campaign offered clues that she might now be willing to do so. She mentioned Trump’s age throughout the day yesterday (inflating it by three years, to 80) and brought up the perplexing sequence from Trump’s Friday-night rally, in which he seemed to suggest that Haley had been in charge of security at the Capitol on January 6 (he apparently had mistaken her for Nancy Pelosi).

    Perhaps more notably, Haley conveyed that she was willing to draw out the race for as long as necessary. “Joe Biden isn’t going to get any younger or any better,” she said in her speech in Concord. “We’ll have all the time we need to beat Joe Biden.” This carried a sly message directed at Trump: He wasn’t getting any younger or better, either. And the longer the race continued, the more his court cases would advance, new facts would be revealed, and his behavior could spiral. Haley pointed out that voters in 20 states would be casting ballots in the next two months. There would be many more contests to enjoy, or stay alive for.

    If nothing else, Haley would live to see another Election Day, in another state.

    Primary days can give off an oddly freewheeling and punch-drunk vibe. Candidates, staffers, and volunteers have all done their work. Most of them are exhausted and often battling colds, hangovers, or other ailments. There is no more practice and preparation left to do.

    “The hay is in the barn,” as old political hacks like to say. Or, at least one political hack said this—to me—but I forget who it was. I’ve also seen the maxim attributed to stir-crazy football coaches (before the big game) and distance runners (before a race). The basic idea is the same: There’s not much left to do, except find a way to pass hours and burn nervous energy.

    Everything that remains tends to be improvisational and hardly strategic. Candidates rush around, trying to get supporters out to vote and, in Haley’s case, to convince them that the race is not over, despite all the polls showing Trump with a big lead.

    “I don’t even want to talk about numbers, and I don’t think y’all should either,” Haley admonished Bash at Chez Vachon.

    She then mentioned one number in particular: six.

    That reflects the sum of votes that Haley received in Dixville Notch, the tiny village in the northern tip of the state that is known for tallying its votes just after midnight on the morning of the primary. “There were more than 10 journalists for every voter,” The New York Times said in its report on the wee-hours scene, which it called “as much a press spectacle as it is a serious exercise in democracy.” (The same could be said about the New Hampshire primary in general, an exercise that features a relatively tiny number of voters whose views are comically amplified by media swarms.)

    “All six came to us,” Haley reported of the Dixville Notch vote. “Not part, not one—all six.”

    Haley was joined at Chez Vachon by New Hampshire Governor Chris Sununu, her biggest supporter and frequent traveling companion across the state in recent weeks. At one point, I asked Sununu, who was standing next to the kitchen door—nearly getting run over by waitresses carrying plates loaded with pancakes, bacon, and poutine drowned in brown gravy—whether he was worried that this might be the last New Hampshire primary as we know it. Some have predicted as much, given that the Democrats are no longer holding their first contest here. Was he feeling wistful at all, nostalgic maybe?

    “Nah, we’re always in this. It never leaves us,” Sununu said. He added that the Democrats had “learned their lesson”—that they never should have messed with New Hampshire and tried to take away its rightful spot at the front of the primary parade.

    Sununu has shown himself willing to question Trump’s age and mental fitness more directly than Haley had been until the past few days. “If he’s off the teleprompter, he can barely keep a cogent thought,” Sununu said of Trump in an interview with Fox News yesterday. “This guy is nearly 80 years old.”

    “He’s 77,” the Fox host corrected him.

    “That’s nearly 80,” Sununu maintained. “We’ll do math later.”

    He has an obvious point about Trump, one that’s worth making. But this is a pet peeve of mine. Sununu and Haley often say that a Donald Trump–Joe Biden rematch would feature “two 80-year-olds.” Haley recently said that if Trump were convicted, and she were elected, she would likely pardon the former president. Why? Because it’s not in the country’s interest to have “an 80-year-old man sitting in jail,” she said.

    It sounds like a minor thing, but if Haley is going to attack Trump (correctly) for lying, if she’s going to try to claim some moral high ground in this race, she herself should not be fudging the facts. There’s no need to anyway; at 52, she’s clearly younger than both him and Biden.

    Since I figured the encounter at Chez Vachon might be the last time that I’d be so close to Haley—maybe ever—I decided to be one of those nuisance reporters and follow her out of the restaurant.

    “How old is President Trump?” I asked her as she crossed Kelley Street. Haley ignored me.

    “How old is President Trump?” I tried again. She kept walking. Someone else shouted a question that I didn’t hear.

    “There’s a lot of energy, that’s what we’re seeing today,” Haley said in a rote tone, disappearing into a town car and motoring off to her next stop, and then more stops after that.

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    Mark Leibovich

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  • 1/23: CBS Evening News

    1/23: CBS Evening News

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    1/23: CBS Evening News – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    New Hampshire voters head to polls in first 2024 primary; Charles Osgood, CBS News veteran and longtime “Sunday Morning” host, dies at 91

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  • Trump Is Having A Temper Tantrum Because Nikki Haley Won't Drop Out

    Trump Is Having A Temper Tantrum Because Nikki Haley Won't Drop Out

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    Trump is reportedly privately asking people around him why Nikki Haley didn’t drop out of the race after losing New Hampshire as he has increased threats and attacks against her.

    Kaitlin Collins of CNN tweeted:

    Trump’s tantrum spilled out during his victory speech when he threatened Haley:

    And just a little note to Nikki. She’s not gonna win, but if she did, she would be under investigation by those people in 15 minutes. And I could tell you five reasons why already, not big reasons, a little stuff that she doesn’t want to talk about, but she will be under investigation within minutes.

    And so would Ron have been, but he decided to get out, he decided to get out. Now Vivek I don’t think would be at all, because he’s perfect, right?

    Video:

    Trump really thought that Haley was going to quit after losing New Hampshire even though she gave no indication that a loss would cause her to end her campaign.

    Donald Trump isn’t taking his smaller than expected margin of victory well in New Hampshire. If Haley stays in the race through Super Tuesday, Trump might lose what little is left of his mind.

    A Special Message From PoliticusUSA

    If you are in a position to donate purely to help us keep the doors open on PoliticusUSA during what is a critical election year, please do so here. 

    We have been honored to be able to put your interests first for 14 years as we only answer to our readers and we will not compromise on that fundamental, core PoliticusUSA value.

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    Jason Easley

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