According to this story, New Hampshire’s State Senate will create a new committee just for election law bills, because there are so many election law bills in the upcoming 2017 session. The New Hampshire already has an election law committee.
According to this story, New Hampshire’s State Senate will create a new committee just for election law bills, because there are so many election law bills in the upcoming 2017 session. The New Hampshire already has an election law committee.
The State hacks are getting COMMAND orders from the top HACKS in Devil City to TOTALLY RIG elections —
HACK election officers
Electors – who exactly
Elector registration
Minority Rule Gerrymanders – super especially
Ballot access
Elector I.D.
Voting devices
Vote counts and recounts (if any)
Etc.
—
P.R. and nonpartisan App.V.
The second sentence probably should read: “The New Hampshire House …”
The New Hampshire House of Representatives has 400 members, while there are only 24 senators.
The House Election Law committee has 20 members, and it appears that representatives only serve on one standing committee.
Senate standing committees have 5 members, and senators serve on two to four committees. In previous sessions, the Public and Municipal Affairs committee heard election bills. This session, that committee has four freshmen members, while the new Election Law committee only has one freshmen. It appears that the non-election laws are considered less critical or important and can be trusted to four rookies. So it might be considered that the Election Law committee is a renaming.
New Hampshire had three close statewide races this year with a 2736 plurality for president, and only 1017 for senator. Close elections always uncover faults in election laws, so there is likely to be more attention.