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Results are in! See how your town or city ward voted.

Results stories:

Kelly Ayotte easily defeated opponent Chuck Morse while Joyce Craig prevailed over Cinde Warmington and Jon Kiper.

In the Democratic primary for Congressional District 2, Nashua-raised Maggie Goodlander easily garnered enough votes to overtake Concord resident Colin Van Ostern.

On the Republican side, Lily Tang Williams was able to fend off multiple other candidates to clinch the primary win.

For state Senate District 15, covering all of Concord, plus Bow and Hopkinton, veteran politician Tara Reardon prevailed over incumbent state representatives Rebecca McWilliams and Angela Brennan.

Stories from the polling booths

In tight State Senate primary race, Tara Reardon has no comment at Concord polls

The Ward 5 polling station at the Christa McAuliffe School was the epicenter of election day energy in the Capital City Tuesday morning. 

Not long after voting began, a swarm of CindeWarmington supporters flocked to the courtyard outside the school sprouting a forest of green signs.

About 30 minutes later, a similar procession of Colin Van Ostern supporters in a wave of royal blue arrived and then ebbed.

 Read more here

Democratic governor candidates Warmington and Craig cast ballots and meet voters across the state

Democratic gubernatorial candidates Cinde Warmington and Joyce Craig began their days early by casting their votes and greeting voters in their home cities.

In their final push to win the Democratic nomination, the candidates intend to spend their days interacting with New Hampshire voters.

Warmington, a Concord resident, has served two terms as the Executive Council representative for District 2. The healthcare advocate and lawyer is the only Democrat on the council.

 Read more here

Hopkinton voters weigh in on campaigning strategies at the polls

Here’s a roundup of stories on the candidates for the various races you’ll be voting in on September 10

Governor Race

Where they stand: How N.H. gubernatorial candidates would tackle energy

 Most of the candidates who hope to  serve as  the Granite State’s governor  said they  support renewable forms of  energy and  environmentally-friendly  policies. Of course,  how green their  plans are varies vastly  between  candidates.

 Read more here

Candidates for governor give their positions on NH’s public education system

At its core, public education is funded  by the government and local  communities – and in campaign  events across the state this election  season, candidates and voters are  questioning the current system.

Read more here

Gubernatorial candidates on the opioid crisis

As the Sept. 10 state primary election draws ever closer, candidates are going full-throttle with attack ads. Last week, the attack-du-jour was between Democratic candidates for governor, Joyce Craig and Cinde Warmington.

 Read more here

Gubernatorial candidates weigh in on marijuana

 In sharp contrast to Gov. Chris  Sununu, the Republican candidates  running to replace him have vowed to  veto any future efforts to legalize  cannabis.

 Read more here

Gubernatorial candidates say they talk daily about the housing crisis. Their ideas on root causes and resolutions vary.

New Hampshire’s gubernatorial  candidates are in agreement with  voters: housing in the state is at a  crisis point.

 To Cinde Warmington, the lone  Democrat on the Executive Council,  there’s one person to blame for the  current state of affairs: Governor  Chris Sununu.

  Read more here

Congressional District 2 

NH’s ‘supply and demand’ issue: Congressional candidates for District 2 weigh housing solutions

 The Granite State has a major housing  problem. It’s no secret – the supply is low, new  developments are slow to evolve and the spots  that are available for rent and purchase are  too expensive for many to afford. Thirty-five  percent of people listed housing as the “most  important problem” facing the state, according  to a recent Granite State Poll conducted by the  University of New Hampshire.

  Read more here

On day of Georgia school shooting, NH GOP candidates for Congress supported gun rights with different approaches

 In response to a shooting where four people  were killed at a high school in Georgia – Lily  Tang Williams cited her endorsement from 18  local gun shops and said gun-free zones can  cost lives. She wants more Americans to arm  themselves, which is their “God-given  right,” and be trained to use their weapons. 

  Read more here

Goodlander, Van Ostern launch accusations over backgrounds, reproductive rights at debate

 Colin Van Ostern and Maggie Goodlander  exchanged a blitz of accusations about their  backgrounds, funding and past political  work, all of which have been prominent  themes in their tense race for New  Hampshire’s second congressional district.

 Read more here

New England College students have a front-row seat to watch Morse and Ayotte battle over credentials

 Sumana Anand didn’t know much about Kelly  Ayotte or Chuck Morse when she took her seat  in the auditorium of New England College.

 The 17-year-old student from Derry kicked off  her freshman year by attending her first  candidate debate just before she turns 18 later  this month and can register to vote in the  November general election.

 Read more here

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