NH GOP - ICUMI: DEMOCRATS CRITICIZE DEMOCRAT LEADERSHIP’S RADICAL AGENDA
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IT:
DEMOCRATS CRITICIZE
DEMOCRAT LEADERSHIP’S RADICAL AGENDA
“It’s
unbelievable, this liberal agenda up here.”
Democrat State Rep. Mark Preston
(Seabrook) On The Democrat Leadership’s Radical Agenda
New Hampshire
House Takes A Hard Turn Left
Gloucester
Daily Times
Angeljean
Chiaramida
April 27, 2009
In a landmark
session, the New Hampshire House of Representatives appears to many to be
having an identity crisis.
The
400-member House — the second largest legislative body in the nation
— has never before been known as a bunch of social liberals. Dominated by
Republicans for more than a century, the body has held strong to the state's
historic conservative roots, voting down bills with liberal leanings that have
sailed through on Massachusetts' Beacon Hill.
But since
January, House members have passed bills to abolish the death penalty, legalize
gay marriage, allow the medical use of marijuana and force adults to wear seat
belts, something the Granite State has resisted forever.
And then
there was the passage of a bill to protect transgender individuals from
discrimination, which Republicans dubbed "the bathroom bill."
Although the
2007 elections put Democrats in control of the New Hampshire House, Senate,
Executive Council and the Governor's corner office, even some New Hampshire
Democrats are wondering what's going on in Concord, and if things are swinging
too far left.
"It's
unbelievable, this liberal agenda up here," said state Rep. Mark Preston,
D-Seabrook, appalled that his colleagues in the House had approved the
elimination of the death penalty. "I never thought I'd see the day in New
Hampshire when a repeal of the death penalty would pass."
Neither was
Preston, a police sergeant in Seabrook, happy about the House's decision to
legalize marijuana for medical reasons, another bill he said he thought would
never pass.
Life-long
Seabrook Democrat Bette Thibodeau said New Hampshire Democrats have never
before been as liberal as their counterparts to the south, but that appears to
be changing.
Husband and
wife state Representatives Amy and Koko Perkins, R-Seabrook, made a simple
statement recently that summed up their freshman year in the House.
"It's no
place for conservatives, I can tell you that," Koko Perkins said not long
ago.
Twelve-year
veteran state Rep. Al Weare chuckled when asked his impression of this session
in the House.
"Being a
very conservative individual, for these issues, it's kind of unbelievable to
see this happening in the state of New Hampshire. But, I think ultimately this
could backfire. They could end up with problems they aren't expecting. I think
it can have an adverse effect for some in the next election."
…..
New Hampshire
Republican pundit and Seabrook fire Chief Jeff Brown believes New Hampshire
Legislature's stray to the left on social issues is the result of years of
suppression by Republicans. Members of New Hampshire's Grand Old Party had a
hold on the legislative majority and kept their members in lock-step with conservative
party lines for decades.
In control
for the first time in anyone's living memory, Democrats are grabbing all they
can while they can, Brown said.
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