New Hampshire
Presidential campaigning continues in NH 4 weeks until election
Four weeks until Election Day and the campaign trail is still finding its way to New Hampshire.
Sen. Cory Booker, D-NJ, campaigning for Vice President Kamala Harris on Tuesday, insisted the Granite State remains up for grabs.
“We need these electoral votes, but we also want to blow it out so we can run up the popular vote,” Booker said.
Both campaigns are in a sprint to the finish line, with both Harris and former President Donald Trump visiting key battleground states over the next two weeks.
NBC10 Boston Political Commentator Sue O’Connell talks about how Kamala Harris and Donald Trump are courting voters in key swing states, what to look out for in Tuesday’s debate between their vice presidential candidates and more.
The places and people prioritized by the candidates tell a story. Analysts see emphasis being placed on battleground states and attempts to woo the slim segment of voters that will decide the White House.
“This election is probably going to come down to Pennsylvania, Georgia, North Carolina, Arizona to some extent,” political analyst Glen Johnson said. “People need to be prepared to not know results on Election Day.”
Johnson and others are also preparing for a series of election challenges, which Johnson said could be held off if either candidate wins in decisive fashion.
“If the Democrats see malfeasance in any way, if Republicans feel like they lost a close race, I think election challenges are assured in some of these battleground states,” Johnson said.
Those dynamics will likely stay in place as the days tick away.
“We cannot take things for granted,” Booker said.
Election Day is Nov. 5, with the final day for voter registration in Massachusetts slated for Oct. 26. Same-day voter registration is allowed in New Hampshire.
New Hampshire
New Hampshire Gov. signs law requiring schools to out trans kids
New Hampshire Governor Kelly Ayotte (Getty Images)
New Hampshire Gov. Kelly Ayotte has signed legislation requiring public school employees to disclose information about transgender students to their parents or legal guardians, reversing a 2024 state Supreme Court ruling that upheld students’ privacy rights in certain circumstances.
Ayotte’s office announced on 2 July that the legislation had been signed into law. Under SB 430, educators must respond to written requests from parents for “material information” about their child, even if a student has asked that the information be kept confidential or fears negative consequences at home.
Supporters of the legislation, such as Republican state Senator Tim Lang, argue the measure strengthens parental rights and enables families to better support children who may be struggling. “If you don’t tell the parent, the parent can’t watch for the signs of self-harm,” Lang told New Hampshire Public Radio.
Educators and LGBTQ+ advocates, however, say the law places teachers in an impossible position by forcing them to choose between complying with the law and protecting vulnerable students. Megan Tuttle, president of NEA-New Hampshire, the state’s largest teachers’ union, said in a statement that the legislation is “vaguely written and risks putting educators in a position of outing a student.” She added that schools should remain places where every student feels “safe, seen, and free to be themselves.”
Aimee Terravechia, executive director of LGBTQ+ advocacy group 603 Equality, warned the law could erode trust between students and educators while speaking with New Hampshire Public Radio. “Schools should be a place of learning… and a place of critical self-examination,” she said. “Placing educators into a role of monitoring and reporting removes the trust necessary for a thriving academic environment.”
The legislation also effectively overturns a 2024 New Hampshire Supreme Court decision, in which justices ruled that keeping a student’s gender identity confidential did not unlawfully interfere with parents’ rights, noting that parents still retained numerous ways to support and communicate with their children outside the classroom.
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New Hampshire
New Hampshire’s boutique Centennial Hotel sold to Lord Hotels
New Hampshire
New hampshire set to approve world’s first $100 million bitcoin-backed municipal bond
New Hampshire is poised to approve the world’s first Bitcoin-backed municipal bond, valued at $100 million, according to social media reports. The bond is designed as a conduit bond with no taxpayer funds at risk, using over-collateralized Bitcoin held by BitGo Trust to secure the repayment. The bond’s innovative structure and potential implications for crypto-backed public debt have attracted attention, with Moody’s assigning it a provisional Ba2 rating. The bond, conceptualized by Wave Digital Assets in collaboration with Rosemawr Management, awaits final approval from the Governor and Executive Council. The market’s response to this development could influence Bitcoin’s future price expectations.
Key Takeaways
- The announcement suggests a significant step in integrating Bitcoin into traditional financial structures.
- Market participants appear to interpret this development as potentially increasing institutional confidence in Bitcoin.
- The bond’s approval could lead to a moderate increase in the odds of Bitcoin reaching higher price targets.
What to Watch
The final decision from the Governor and Executive Council in New Hampshire will be a key indicator of the bond’s impact. Observers may look for potential shifts in institutional adoption of Bitcoin as a collateral asset. Any further developments or official announcements regarding the bond’s pricing date could influence market expectations related to Bitcoin’s future valuation.
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