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These objective, nonpartisan measures are used to show this legislator's activities at the Statehouse in 2023. The measures are not intended to present a ranking or rating of any kind. Average is that of all state elected officials in this chamber. Gov. Sununu is still in the process of signing and vetoing 2023 bills, so the number of prime sponsored bills that became law may increase.

Session days attended
93% Present
Average 95%
Party unity score/partisanship
99% With Party
Average 95%
Participated in official roll call votes
93% Roll Call Votes
Average 93%
Bills sponsored (as prime sponsor)
3 Prime Sponsored Bills
Average 2
Prime sponsored bills that became law
0 Became Law

Voting Record

HB 10 (2023)

Establishes a parental bill of rights. Some of the parental rights in this bill include:
"The right to direct the education and care of his or her minor child"
"The right to be physically present at any health care facility ... at which their minor child is receiving hospital care"
"The right to consent in writing before a biometric scan of his or her minor child is made, shared, or stored"

HB 106 (2023)

Establishes a procedure for issuing "extreme risk protection orders" to protect against persons who pose an immediate risk of harm to themselves or others. An extreme risk protection order would restrict a person's access to firearms, and is also known as a "red flag law."

HB 2 (2023)

State budget bill (part 2). The governor presented his proposal for the next state budget February 14. The House and Senate both made changes to that proposal. Click here to read a summary of the 2023 budget process.

HB 208 (2023)

Establishes greenhouse gas emission reduction goals for the state, to net zero by 2050. This bill also requires the Department of Environmental Services to develop a climate action plan by July 1, 2024, that includes evaluation of best available information, considers inclusion of strategies, programs and compliance mechanisms with measurable goals and targets, considers opportunities to encourage investment in low/moderate income, rural and minority communities, makes recommendations on retraining and apprenticeship opportunities, and coordinates with other state agencies.

HB 224 (2023)

Repeals the civil and criminal penalties for health care providers who violate the state's ban on abortion after 24 weeks.

HB 367 (2023)

Increases the maximum household income limit for participation in the Education Freedom Account program, from 300% to 500% of the federal poverty guidelines. The Education Freedom Account program allows families to spend the state's per-pupil share of education funding on private or home school expenses.

The House amended the bill to only increase the income limit to 350% of the federal poverty guidelines.

HB 523 (2023)

Increases the maximum electric generating capacity to participate in net energy metering, from one to five megawatts. This bill also modifies the transition of tariffs applicable to some customer-generators.

HB 557 (2023)

Removes the authority of the Department of Health and Human Services to require vaccinations beyond those in state law. This bill specifically notes that the requirements for chickenpox, Hepatitis B, and Hib vaccinations will expire in 2026.

HB 567 (2023)

Requires at least 30 days written notice for a rent increase. Large, multi-unit rental owners must provide at least 60 days notice. If the rent increase is over 15%, large multi-unit landlords must provide at least 6 months notice.

HB 57 (2023)

Gradually raises the minimum wage to $15 per hour over the next three years, with future adjustments based on the consumer price index. This bill also raises the tipped minimum wage from 45% to 50% of the regular minimum wage. Lastly, this bill allows a minimum wage of $8 per hour for youth under age 18 for the first six months of employment.

HB 59 (2023)

Requires commercial sales and transfers of firearms to take place through licensed dealers. Those dealers are required to perform background checks.

HB 624 (2023)

Requires state and local law enforcement to notify the public before an immigration checkpoint.

HB 639 (2023)

Legalizes marijuana for adults over age twenty-one. The bill allows limited home-growing of marijuana. A new Cannabis Commission would oversee licensing and regulations related to the manufacture, testing, and sale of legal marijuana. Cannabis sales would be taxed under the Meals and Rooms tax system. Alternative Treatment Centers, which currently serve the state's medical marijuana patients, would be allowed to apply for a "dual use certificate" that allows them to participate in recreational marijuana business. Towns could limit marijuana businesses.

SB 263 (2023)

Permanently reauthorizes the New Hampshire Granite Advantage Health Care Program, commonly known as expanded Medicaid. Previous law ended the program on December 31, 2023. This bill also reestablishes and revises the commission to evaluate the New Hampshire Granite Advantage Health Care Program, commonly known as expanded Medicaid.

SB 272 (2023)

Establishes a parental bill of rights in education. Some of the parental rights in this bill include:
"The right to access and review all medical records of a child maintained by a school or school personnel"
"The right to inquire of the school or school personnel and to be truthfully and completely informed if the child is being identified or referred to by school district staff, as being of a gender other than that of which the child was identified or referred when enrolled"

Position on Issues

Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2022

Do you support the “Education Freedom Account” program, which gives students access to the per-pupil share of state school funding to spend on private school or home school expenses?

"Absolutely support. Parents, short of abuse, have the absolute authority to direct the education, and inculcation of values of their children. If their State or community isn't achieving that for them, they should have the option of doing it themselves with the same financial backing the State provides other students."

Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2022

Should New Hampshire ban abortions during the first trimester (e.g. after 6 weeks gestation)?

"With the exception of cases involving a lack of exercised personal agency, i.e. rape (whether forcible or statutory), pregnancy is a natural - as in imposed by nature, not man - and eminently foreseeable consequence of sex. Consequences imposed by nature do not grant license to murder."

Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2022

Should New Hampshire ban abortions during the second trimester (e.g. after 15 weeks gestation)?

"With the exception of cases involving a lack of exercised personal agency, i.e. rape (whether forcible or statutory), pregnancy is a natural - as in imposed by nature, not man - and eminently foreseeable consequence of sex. Consequences imposed by nature do not grant license to murder."

Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2022

Should New Hampshire ban discussions about sexual orientation and gender identity in grades K-3?

"Children do not have 'sexual orientation.' Children are pre-sexual and innocent, and the purposeful corruption of childhood innocence by discussing graphic, personal sexuality with pre-teens, and grooming broadly, should be criminalized."

Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2022

Do you support the state law that bans teaching certain concepts, such as the idea that people may be "inherently racist, sexist, or oppressive, whether consciously or unconsciously"?

"This is not education, it's indoctrination into a Marxian faith system of metaphysics and dogma, and it's hurting kids. We need to go beyond the current anti-CRT legislation to removing Social Emotional Learning (practicing psychology), gender ideology (Queer Theory), and all derivatives of Critical Theory and Intersectionality. I've drafted legislation to remove this entire faith system from government and schools as a violation of the Establishment Clause."

Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2022

Should New Hampshire add a tax credit for businesses that contribute to student loan repayment for employees?

"Given the disastrous state of higher education the last thing the state should be doing is further subsidizing it. If anything, we should be looking at seizing endowments to pay student loans for providing indoctrination instead of education, and training up objectively harmful Marxist ideologues instead of contributing members of society."

Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2022

Should New Hampshire lower business taxes?

"We must outcompete regional competitors and reshore supply chains to compete in a business environment that will likely look much different in the coming years, and make sure we never experience the sorts of supply shortages we have, and will continue to, experience in the near term."

Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2022

Should New Hampshire government do more to address climate change?

"NH should do more to address the climate cult as fraudulent by seeking to nullify Federal laws and regulations that hurt NH citizens and are threatening to freeze them to death in their homes this winter with energy prices several times higher YoY."

Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2022

Do you support giving voters who register without ID on Election Day a ballot that only counts if they return identifying documents to the state before a deadline?

"A law properly written would both require that documentation be provided within a certain timeframe, and the triggering of a mandatory criminal investigation if not received."

Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2022

Should New Hampshire add a fee or mileage charge for electric vehicle owners to help pay for transportation and/or electric infrastructure?

"We shouldn't be doing anything for or against electric vehicles. They seem wholly incapable of meeting the needs of the average person, but people can buy them if they want (without subsidies)."

Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2022

Should NH pass stricter gun control laws?

"NH should pursue nullification of Federal firearms laws that violate the Second Amendment and challenge the wrong interpretation of the Commerce Clause when it comes to firearms and accessories manufactured and sold in NH, to NH residents."

Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2022

Should NH add an income tax on earned income?

"The Federal income tax, which was only supposed to be temporary during wartime, shows the folly of authorizing this taxing authority."

Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2022

Do you support the option of mail-in ballots for all voters, not just absentees?

"Elections must be secured, and mail-in voting seriously curtailed. Even Canada's elections make a mockery of the current US, and NH systems for integrity."

Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2022

Should New Hampshire legalize the recreational use of marijuana by allowing home-growing and private use without sales?

"If we're to allow legalized marijuana I don't see any reason the state should license it. That seems more like regulatory capture of the market than a safety consideration."

Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2022

Should New Hampshire legalize the recreational use of marijuana by licensing growers and private retail locations?

"If we're to allow legalized marijuana I don't see any reason the state should license it. That seems more like regulatory capture of the market than a safety consideration."

Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2022

Should New Hampshire legalize the recreational use of marijuana by establishing state-run cannabis stores?

"If we're to allow legalized marijuana I don't see any reason the state should license it. That seems more like regulatory capture of the market than a safety consideration."

Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2022

Should New Hampshire raise the minimum wage?

"The real minimum wage is always zero. Government meddling just means some people who would've been employed now will not be. You want to properly drive wages up? Close the border and limit unskilled immigration."

Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2022

Should the state permanently increase how much tax revenue it shares with towns and cities every year, beyond public school funding?

"Requires further study, but my inclination is to devolve as much authority as feasible to the lowest level."

Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2022

Do you support the gradual phase-out of the Interests and Dividends tax?

"Need to study further."

Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2022

Do you support the state’s current system of public school funding, with each district’s total funding primarily dependent on local property tax revenue?

"Strongly leaning for, but requires further study."

Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2022

Should New Hampshire extend the renewable portfolio standard past 2025, requiring public utilities to obtain more than 25% of electricity from renewable energy sources?

"Absolutely not. People are getting crushed by inflation while cronyism makes corporate science projects wealthy. We lack, entirely, the battery backup capacity and technology to make any 'green' energy solution remotely plausible. Small nuclear appears to be the future."

Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2022

Should New Hampshire repeal the ban on abortion after 24 weeks gestation?

"With the exception of cases involving a lack of exercised personal agency, i.e. rape (whether forcible or statutory), pregnancy is a natural - as in imposed by nature, not man - and eminently foreseeable consequence of sex. Consequences imposed by nature do not grant license to murder."

Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2022

Should New Hampshire guarantee the right to access abortion before 24 weeks?

"With the exception of cases involving a lack of exercised personal agency, i.e. rape (whether forcible or statutory), pregnancy is a natural - as in imposed by nature, not man - and eminently foreseeable consequence of sex. Consequences imposed by nature do not grant license to murder."

Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2022

Should NH add a broad-based sales tax?

"Against"

Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2022

Should the state do more to encourage municipalities to remove zoning barriers to housing development?

"Local zoning authority needs to be rolled back substantially. We're looking at multiple young generations that cannot afford a home due to overly restrictive, and expensive zoning meddling in private matters."

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