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Transcript: Sen. Jeanne Shaheen on

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Transcript: Sen. Jeanne Shaheen on


The following is the transcript of the interview with Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, Democrat of New Hampshire, that aired on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan” on Nov. 16, 2025.


MARGARET BRENNAN: We go now to New Hampshire Democratic Senator Jeanne Shaheen. Good morning to you, Senator.

SENATOR JEANNE SHAHEEN: Good morning. Nice to be with you. 

MARGARET BRENNAN: Well you have spent a good part of the past year trying to get legislation through to extend those Obamacare tax credit subsidies. Last Sunday, you crossed the aisle. You agreed to reopen the government, end the shutdown without a guaranteed extension, but with a promise to have some kind of vote on an ACA bill of Democrats’ own choosing. Do you have consensus among Democrats that this needs to be a vote simply to extend the tax credits as they stand now or are you open to a broader reform of Obamacare?

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SEN. SHAHEEN: Well from the beginning of this shutdown I’ve had two goals. One is to get government up and running again to end the suffering that too many Americans were experiencing because they lost food assistance or they weren’t getting paid federal employees, and the second was to address the high cost of premium- health insurance that people are looking at because insurance companies are setting rates based on the fact that those premium tax credits are not- are supposed to go away at the end of this year. I think people are now very aware of the fact that they are going to see huge rate increases double for so many people, and an unaffordable cost of health insurance if those premium tax credits go away. And what I think we need to do, and these are conversations that we need to have, is we need to work with our Republican colleagues to try and get a bill that can be supported. That can get through both houses of Congress where we’ve been talking to our Republicans, Senator Cassidy, throughout the shutdown, about what we might be able to agree to. We’ve been talking to House members on both sides of the aisle, and so now we need to work together. I agree with Senator Cassidy. This should be a bill that is not partisan, but it should be a bill to extend those premium tax credits, because, as everybody has talked about, there is real urgency to get this done. And if we don’t address it, then people are going to see huge rate increases. —

MARGARET BRENNAN: — Yeah. — 

SEN. SHAHEEN: — So we can work together, we can extend the credits, but we probably can’t implement significant reforms that Senator Cassidy was talking about in the time frame that we’ve got. So we need to look both in the short term and in the long term for how we address the cost of health care.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Okay, so that’s an important point. So the 26 billion or so that he talks about as the cost for extension of these that he wants to redirect into these cash accounts, these flexible accounts. You’re saying you can’t get that done in six weeks time.

SEN. SHAHEEN: No, you can’t. —

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MARGARET BRENNAN: — Okay. — 

SEN. SHAHEEN: — And again, there’s real urgency to do this. There’s some good, bipartisan legislation that has come out of committee in the Senate that I think we should take up. Things that would expedite approval of generic drugs and biosimilars, that would address PBM reform, which is a huge cost increase for health care, but that’s a longer term issue. Right now, we need to address what people are facing in terms of those high rate increases because of the threat that these premium tax credits are going to end.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Just to put a fine point on it, when we heard the Congressman at the top of the program talk about, you know, caps on income and restrictions on who can benefit from those tax credits. Can you get your fellow Democrats, who, by the way, are pretty angry at each other, angry at you as well, about this decision to reopen the government? Can you get everyone on board? Or can you at least get to 60 votes to be able to extend those subsidies with tweaks?

SEN. SHAHEEN: Well, first of all, we need to put the shutdown behind us in the circular firing squad and remember why we’re in this situation. We’re in this situation because Donald Trump and Speaker Johnson and the Republican majorities in the House and Senate have refused to address cost, the cost of health care, and are trying to throw people off their health care. Can we get to consensus? Well, we need to, if we’re going to get a bipartisan bill out of the Congress. I think we’ve seen and heard from health insurance companies that implementing significant changes in the first year is going to be really difficult to do, almost impossible. But we ought to be able to agree on some changes like capping the income of people who receive those premium tax credits. Right now, 94% of people who get the credits earn under $200,000 a year, and the average income for a single recipient is about a little over $30,000 a year. So most people who are getting these tax credits are not in that high income level — 

MARGARET BRENNAN: — Yeah. — 

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SEN. SHAHEEN: — And so we should be able to agree on that. We should be able to agree that we don’t want any fraud and abuse in the program. — 

MARGARET BRENNAN: — Right. — 

SEN. SHAHEEN: — That’s something Republicans and Democrats believe in. So let’s focus on what we can agree to. Let’s look at what we can get done in the time frame we have, and recognize there is real urgency to get these premium tax credits extended.

MARGARET BRENNAN: So you’re going to have this vote around the second week of December, but premiums are already notified out. They are already — 

SEN. SHAHEEN: — Right. — 

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MARGARET BRENNAN: — sort of baked in here for- certainly for Americans who buy government health care. Is it too late to extend open enrollment? I mean, Senator Cassidy was saying like ship has sailed here.

SEN. SHAHEEN: No, we could actually decide that we were willing as part of this legislation to extend open enrollment. Obviously, we need support from the administration, but insurance companies, in meeting with the insurance industry, they’ve indicated that while it would be difficult, they could address some of the challenges around not getting agreement until December. Again, that’s why there’s urgency to get this done. 

MARGARET BRENNAN: I want to ask you about another matter. Survivors of convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, as well as some of the families of those survivors, wrote a letter to lawmakers supporting the release of Justice Department internal communications in regard to his case. In that letter, they said there was no middle ground here. There was no hiding behind party affiliation. We will remember your decision at the ballot box. You know, this House vote is set to come up this week. Should there be a vote in the Senate? And would you support it, to see the release of these documents?

SEN. SHAHEEN: Absolutely. We need to release the documents. The American people need to see what’s in them. And if President Trump says there’s nothing there that he’s concerned about, then why doesn’t he support release of the documents?

MARGARET BRENNAN: Well, we will see if the Republican leader in the Senate takes up your proposal there. There has not been a commitment to have that kind of vote. But on Venezuela, since you are ranking member on Senate Foreign Relations, I want to make sure I ask you, the President said he has sort of made up his mind on what to do about Venezuela. You were one of the very few senators who have received briefings within the past few weeks from Secretaries Rubio and Hegseth regarding the strikes that are being carried out on these small, fast moving boats. Is there a clear end game here and is your understanding that ousting Nicolas Maduro from power is part of the administration’s plan? 

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SEN. SHAHEEN: I don’t think it’s clear what the end game is for this administration with respect to Venezuela. They’re relying on a legal opinion, excuse me, in terms of the boat strikes that they have not released. They have finally made it available to members of Congress, but they haven’t released it to the public. They are escalating in a way that talking about a land strike through special operations that puts at risk our men and women in the military. We have so much firepower now in the Caribbean, the Gerald R. Ford has been taken from the Red Sea, so that now we don’t have any firepower, really, in the Middle East as we look at the threats there. We don’t have what we need, I think, in the Indo-Pacific or in Europe. And so what the President has done here is to put at risk other parts of the world and Americans in other parts of the world for this fascination on trying to get rid of Nicolás Maduro in Venezuela, who clearly is — 

MARGARET BRENNAN: — Yeah. — 

SEN. SHAHEEN: — a bad character. He’s been involved in drug — 

MARGARET BRENNAN: — Yeah. — 

SEN. SHAHEEN: — illegal drugs. But he is not a threat to the United States of America. — 

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MARGARET BRENNAN: — Okay. — 

SEN. SHAHEEN: — And what the President is doing is raising real questions.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Senator Shaheen, thank you for your time this morning. We’ll be back in a moment. 



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New Hampshire

2 hospitalized with life-threatening CO poisoning in New Hampshire

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2 hospitalized with life-threatening CO poisoning in New Hampshire


Two people were rushed to the hospital with carbon monoxide poisoning after an incident at a condominium building in Plymouth, New Hampshire, on Wednesday.

Plymouth Fire Rescue said they were called to building on Tenney Brook Road around 4 a.m. for reports of people feeling sick. Firefighters logged CO readings over 500 parts per million (PPM) in the unit – a level considered “immediately dangerous to life and health.”

According to the EPA, a reading above nine parts per million is considered unsafe for an eight-hour exposure, and anything over 35 parts per million is considered unsafe after one hour.

Off-duty first responders were called in to assist at the scene. Fire crews removed two people from the home and evacuated the remaining five units of the building. Two residents were transported to the hospital with life-threatening injuries.

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The source of the CO was tracked to an on-demand water heater, though the exact cause of the leak remains under investigation. Firefighters shut off the gas and ventilated the building until readings were back to zero parts per million.

CO is a colorless, odorless, gas and exposure can be fatal. Residents are urged to have working CO detectors in their homes.

Early signs of CO poisoning include headache, nausea, dizziness, and disorientation. If you suspect a CO leak or if your CO detector goes off, get outside and call 911.



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New Hampshire

Cinde Warmington launches second bid for New Hampshire governor

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Cinde Warmington launches second bid for New Hampshire governor


Former Executive Councilor Cinde Warmington is again running for governor.

Warmington, who also ran in 2024 and lost in the Democratic primary, says her campaign will focus on making New Hampshire more affordable, something she says Republican Gov. Kelly Ayotte has failed to achieve.

“The prices of groceries, housing, electricity and property taxes are crushing working families,” Warmington said in a statement Wednesday morning. “Kelly Ayotte is making life in New Hampshire even more expensive.”

Warmington, 68, is a former health care attorney. In the video announcing her run, she promised to oppose a sales or income tax, to end the state’s voucher-like school choice program, and to fight a range of policies backed by President Trump.

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“I’ll repeal the private school voucher scheme that’s damaging public schools and driving up property taxes. I’ll stand up to Trump when he jacks up health care costs and tariffs. I’ll say no to ICE’s warehouse, and I’ll work for our small businesses and make sure we don’t have a sales or income tax,” Warmington said.

Warmington joins Newmarket businessman Jon Kiper in the Democratic primary. She lost the gubernatorial primary in 2024 to then-Manchester Mayor Joyce Craig by 6%. She won seven of the state’s 10 counties, but votes from New Hampshire’s largest city put Craig over the top.

John Corbett, a spokesperson for Ayotte’s campaign, issued a statement criticizing Warmington’s past legal work representing a chain of pain clinics and her role as a lobbyist for Purdue Pharma, the maker of OxyContin.

“Cinde chose to make money off big pharmaceutical companies who hurt Granite Staters, and she is absolutely disqualified from serving as our Governor,” Corbett said.

Warmington faced similar attacks during the Democratic primary race two years ago. In a statement Wednesday morning, Kiper renewed criticisms of Warmington’s ties to the opioid industry.

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“Warmington has accepted thousands in campaign donations from the very clinics that overprescribed her self-described ‘miracle drug,’ OxyContin,” he said.

While Warmington’s announcement confirms the Democratic primary will feature more than a single candidate, other Democrats could soon enter the race. Portsmouth Mayor Deaglan McEachern has indicated he’s seriously weighing a run for governor as well.

While Ayotte has not formally said she’s running for reelection this year, she’s all but certain to do so. And while history is on her side — with most governors winning a second term — this year’s political landscape could present challenges for her. Ayotte has spent much of her first year in office trying to maintain a distance from President Trump, while avoiding any direct confrontation with the president. That balance will only get more difficult as Election Day approaches.





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Uncommon cold? This winter gives New Hampshire classic weather vibes, but no records

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Uncommon cold? This winter gives New Hampshire classic weather vibes, but no records


After a string of unseasonably warm winters, this season has felt more like a traditional New England winter, with regular snowfall, frosty temperatures and ice everywhere.

“This is, you know, that’s what our winters are supposed to be like,” said Mary Stampone, New Hampshire’s state climatologist.

This winter has been colder than normal, but “normal” is the word being used to describe a 30-year average of conditions. Stampone said the latest 30-year window of data, from 1990 to 2020, is markedly different from earlier in the 20th century.

Since 1990, she notes, our winter temperatures and snowfall have been up and down.

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“If you remember back in 2015, we had so much snow, right? But in the past five years, we’ve had much less snow than even that warmer normal would suggest,” Stampone said. “And this year happens to be one of those colder years that really is more representative of the type of winter weather we expect here in New England.”

This winter has seen the coldest December and January since that same two-month stretch recorded in 2009, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, based on its statewide average temperature rankings.

Stampone said this is one of the coldest, snowiest winters in New Hampshire since about 2018.

A tow truck on a snowy Elm Street in Manchester, on Jan. 26, 2026.

This classic winter weather has been a blessing for those who love outdoor activities like ice fishing, snowmobiling, skiing, and pond hockey.

It set the stage for a busy New England Pond Hockey Classic earlier this month on Lake Winnipesaukee. And the 97th annual World Championship Sled Dog Derby this past weekend in the Lakes Region was another cool success — warm weather forced organizers to cancel the race in 2024, which was the second year in a row it was called off due to unseasonably warmth and climate change.

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“Our winters overall have warmed substantially, and we are seeing more pronounced warming during that cold season this winter season than we are in other seasons. So winters are warming faster than our summers are,” Stampone said.

Several years of warmer winter weather has meant a decrease in the number of bitter cold days, though the region still gets them.

The state right now has significantly more snowpack on the ground, even in the southern part of the state, than in recent years. This will help the water table, where parts of the state experienced extreme drought last year, and drought still continues across most of New Hampshire.

Some experts say conditions this winter could mean trouble come springtime.

Alex Prusevich, a hydrologist at the University of New Hampshire, said big spring floods require three key ingredients. Based on his observations around Durham, the area’s soil moisture levels and heavy snowpack check off two out of three of those criteria.

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“If there will be heavy, warm rain next month or late winter that may cause another historical flood in the area,” he said.

Look Ahead

The National Weather Service is tracking a potentially heavy band of snow for Wednesday and into the evening, with plowable snow accumulation notably for southern New Hampshire.

There is a chance for another round of snowfall Friday and Saturday.





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