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Joel Winters
| Joel Winters | ||
| New Hampshire House of Representatives, Hillsborough 18 | ||
| Incumbent | ||
| In office | ||
| December 5, 2012 - present | ||
| Term ends | ||
| December 3, 2014 | ||
| Years in position | 1 | |
| Party | Democratic | |
| Compensation | ||
| Base salary | $200/two-year term | |
| Elections and appointments | ||
| Last election | November 6, 2012 | |
| First elected | November 6, 2012 | |
| Next election | November 4, 2014 | |
| Term limits | N/A | |
| Prior offices | ||
| New Hampshire House of Representatives, Hillsborough 17 | ||
| 2006 - 2010 | ||
| Websites | ||
| Office website | ||
Contents |
Winters served in the House previously, representing Hillsborough 17 from 2006 to 2010.[1]
Committee assignments
2013-2014
At the beginning of the 2013 legislative session, Winters served on the following committees:
| New Hampshire Committee Assignments, 2013 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| • Legislative Administration | ||||
2009-2010
In the 2009-2010 legislative session, Winters served on the following committees:
| New Hampshire Committee Assignments, 2009 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| • Commerce and Consumer Affairs | ||||
Election history
2012
Winters won election in the 2012 election for New Hampshire House of Representatives, Hillsborough 18. Winters ran unopposed in the September 11 primary and won election in general election which took place on November 6, 2012.[2][3]
2010
Winters failed to advance past the November 2, 2010 general election.
Winters advanced past the September 14 primary election. He faced incumbent Ronald Boisvert (D), incumbent George Katsiantonis (D), Bob Backus (D), incumbent Connie Soucy (R), incumbent Irene Messier (R), Charles Bernier (D), Tiffany Brown (D), Shaun Leary (D), David George (D), Carlos Gonzalez (R), Phil Greazzo (R), Matthew Swank (R), Tammy Simmons (R), Jerry Bergevin (R), and Thomas Beattie (R) in the November 2 general election.
2008
On November 4, 2008, Winters was re-elected by finishing eighth for the eight-seat Hillsborough 17 District of the New Hampshire House of Representatives receiving 3,826 votes behind Democrats Jane Beaulieu (4,735), David Nixon (4,228), and Ronald Boisvert (4,091), Republicans Irene Messier (4,053) and Connie Soucy (3,917), and Democrats Roger Beauchamp (3,867) and George Katsiantonis (3,848). He ranked ahead of Democrat Patrick Arnold (3,640), Republican Keith Murphy (3,595), Democrat David George (3,592), Republicans Carlos Gonzalez (3,530), Richard Marston (3,392), Tammy Simmons (3,053), Phil Greazzo (2,942), and Jerry Bergevin (2,807), Independent Paul Boisseau (1,142), Libertarian Rich Tomasso (711), and "Others" (41). [4]
Winters raised $3,497 for his campaign.[5]
Campaign donors
2012
Campaign donor information is not yet available for this year.
2008
Winters raised $3,497 for the 2008 election.[6]
Personal
Winters and his wife, Amy, have one child.[1]
Recent news
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Joel Winters News Feed
Cite error: <ref> tags exist, but no <references/> tag was found
External links
- Office website
- Legislative profile from Project Vote Smart
- Biography from Project Vote Smart
- Campaign Contributions: 2008, 2006
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Project Vote Smart - Rep. Winters
- ↑ 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
- ↑ Follow the Money's report on Winters's 2008 campaign contributions
- ↑ Campaign contributors to Joel Winters
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- State legislative article missing donor information
- Current member, New Hampshire House of Representatives
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