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Beth Reever Arsenault
| Beth Reever Arsenault | |
| New Hampshire House of Representatives Belknap 4 | |
| Former member | |
| Term in office began 2006 | |
| Term in office ended 2010 | |
| Political party | Democratic |
| Profession | Legislator |
Arsenault's professional experience includes candidate for New Hampshire State Senate, District 4 in 2002 and 2004. She was also a member of the Laconia School Board from 1998-2004, a board member from New Hampshire State Democratic Committee from 2003-2004, and county chair for the Belknap County Democratic Party from 2003-2004.
Arsenault attended the University of New Hampshire. She is married and has four children; Matthew, Timothy, Benjamin, and Jonathan.[1]
Committee assignments
While in the New Hampshire House of Representatives, Arsenault served on the following committees:
Elections
2010
Arsenault failed to advance past the November 2, 2010 general election.
Arsenault advanced past the September 14 primary election. He faced incumbent Richard Stuart (D), incumbent Donald Flanders (R), David Stamps (D), Ed Allard (D), Maureen Baxley (D), Franklin Tilton (R), Robert Luther (R), Robert Kingsbury (R), and Harry Accornero (R) in the November 2 general election.
2008
On November 4, 2008, Arsenault ran for the Belknap District 4 of the New Hampshire House of Representatives, winning the third of five seats with 3,498 votes, behind Judith Reever(D) with 3,722 votes and Donald Flanders (R) with 3,511 votes, and ahead of John Veazey (R) with 3,337 votes, Richard Stuart with 3,337 votes, Glen Dewhirst (R) with 3,305 votes, James Anderson (R) with 3,167 votes, Thomas Brown Jr. (R) with 3,120 votes, Benjamin Arsenault (D) with 3,023 votes, Edwin Allard (D) with 2,879 votes, and 44 votes for others. [2]
External links
- New Hampshire House of Representatives - Rep. Beth Reever Arsenault
- Legislative profile from Project Vote Smart
- Biography from Project Vote Smart
- Campaign Contributions: 2008, 2006, 2004, 2002
References
| Political offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by - |
New Hampshire House of Representatives, Belknap 4 2006–2010 |
Succeeded by NA |
State of New Hampshire Concord (capital) | |
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