Charles McMahon
| Charles McMahon | ||
| New Hampshire House of Representatives, Rockingham 7 | ||
| Incumbent | ||
| In office | ||
| 2002 - present | ||
| Term ends | ||
| December 3, 2014 | ||
| Years in position | 11 | |
| Party | Republican | |
| Compensation | ||
| Base salary | $200/two-year term | |
| Elections and appointments | ||
| Last election | November 6, 2012 | |
| First elected | 2002 | |
| Next election | November 4, 2014 | |
| Term limits | N/A | |
| Personal | ||
| Profession | Sales | |
| Websites | ||
| Office website | ||
Contents |
Biography
McMahon earned his B.A. from the University of New Hampshire. His professional experience includes working as the president of McMahon Sales Company, Inc., a manufacturing representative, and a electrical manufacturing representative.[1]
Committee assignments
2013-2014
At the beginning of the 2013 legislative session, McMahon served on the following committees:
| New Hampshire Committee Assignments, 2013 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| • Health, Human Services and Elderly Affairs | ||||
2011-2012
In the 2011-2012 legislative session, McMahon served on this committee:
| New Hampshire Committee Assignments, 2011 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| • Health, Human Services and Elderly Affairs | ||||
Election history
2012
McMahon won re-election in the 2012 election for New Hampshire House of Representatives, Rockingham 7. McMahon advanced past the September 11 primary and won re-election in the general election which took place on November 6, 2012.[2][3]
2010
On November 2, 2010 McMahon won election to the New Hampshire House of Representatives.
McMahon advanced past the September 14 primary election. He faced incumbent Carolyn Webber (D), incumbent David Bettencourt (R), incumbent Mary Griffin (R), Kevin Waterhouse (R), incumbent Marilinda Garcia (R), incumbent David Bates (R), incumbent Walter Kolodziej (R), incumbent Ronald Belanger (R), incumbent Robert Elliott (R), Daphne Kenyon (D), Ann Kern (D), Matthew Groch (D), Jane Lang (D), Jocelyn Leary (D), Christine White-Rogers (D), Lori Demaine (D), Neil Fallon (D), Ellie Rouillard (D), Thomas Witham (D), Henri Azibert (D), Matthew O'Shaughnessy (D), John Sytek (R), Richard Okerman (R), Gary Azarian (R), and Donna Mauro (R) in the November 2 general election.
2008
On November 4, 2008, McMahon won election to the New Hampshire House of Representatives from the Rockingham 4 District, which sent thirteen representatives to the New Hampshire House of Representatives, by finishing with the third-highest vote total in the election. McMahon received 9,297 votes. The other winning candidates from Rockingham 4 were David Bettencourt (R) with 10,390 votes, Mary Griffin (R) with 10,171 votes, Anne Priestley (R) with 9,197 votes, Ronald Belanger (R) with 9,155 votes, Anthony DiFruscia (R) with 9,098 votes, Russell Ingram (R) with 8,367 votes, Robert Elliott (R) with 8,324 votes, Mark Pearson (R) with 8,293 votes, Margaret Crisler (R) with 7,886 votes, Walter Kolodziej (R) with 7,744 votes, David Bates (R) with 7,674 votes, and Carolyn Webber (D) with 7,624 votes. The losing candidates in the race were Marilinda Garcia (R) with 7,472 votes, Jessica Garofalo (D) with 6,544 votes, Doris Flaherty (D) with 6,216 votes, Michael Caruso (D) with 6,204 votes, Carol Schneider (D) with 6,158 votes, Connor O'Brien (D) with 6,089 votes, Camron Iannaflo (D) with 6,041 votes, Fran Brennan (D) with 5,675 votes, Frank Kern (D) with 5,326 votes, Lori Demaine (D) with 5,249 votes, Gerald Capron (D) with 4,423 votes, Henri Azibert (D) with 4,254 votes, and Neelima Gogumalla (D) with 4,160 votes. [4]
McMahon raised $1,550 for his campaign in 2008. Other candidates in the Rockingham 4 race (with data available) raised the following amounts: Griffin ($850), Priestley ($50), DiFruscia ($250), Pearson ($250), Kolodziej ($400), Bates ($2,450), Webber ($875), Garcia ($610), and Iannaflo ($525).[5]
Campaign donors
2012
Campaign donor information is not yet available for this year.
2010
In 2010, a year in which McMahon was up for re-election, he collected $1,250 in donations.[6]
No contributions to his campaign were over $1,000.
2008
In 2008, McMahon collected $1,550 in contributions.[7] His five largest contributors were as follows:
| Donor | Amount |
|---|---|
| Bedford Ambulatory Surgical Center | $500 |
| New Hampshire Medical Society | $250 |
| Free and (Unreadable) America PAC | $250 |
| New Hampshire Association of Realtors | $250 |
| New Hampshire Society of Eye Physicians and Surgeons | $250 |
Recent news
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Charles McMahon News Feed
- Storm that struck Seacoast was a microburst - Seacoastonline.com
- Elbert Guillory: Democrats have ignored problems facing the black community - Daily Caller
- Rubio's bill is more disturbing than his motives - Daily Caller
- Five conservative message movies that don't suck - Daily Caller
- Storm that struck Seacoast was microburst - Seacoastonline.com
- The Search for the Magic Fig Leaf - Daily Caller
- 7 conservative message t-shirts that are actually cool - Daily Caller
- Quick-strike storm pelts Seacoast - Seacoastonline.com
- Swing voters walk away from Obama's second term - Daily Caller
- Graham warns Republicans will fall into 'demographic death spiral' if they ... - Daily Caller
Cite error: <ref> tags exist, but no <references/> tag was found
External links
- Office website
- Project Vote Smart legislative profile
- Project Vote Smart biography
- Campaign Contributions: 2010, 2010, 2008, 2006, 2004, 2002
References
- ↑ Project Vote Smart - Rep. McMahon
- ↑ New Hampshire Secretary of State - 2012 Primary Candidates
- ↑ New Hampshire Secretary of State - 2012 Primary Results
- ↑ New Hampshire House of Representatives official election results for 2008
- ↑ Rockingham District 4 New Hampshire House of Representatives Candidate Funds, 2008
- ↑ 2010 campaign contributions
- ↑ 2008 contributions to Charles McMahon
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