Does your state lean blue or lean red? Check out our new report, highlighting partisan control of state government from 1992-2013.
Valerie Hardy
| Valerie Hardy | |
| Hillsborough 27 District, New Hampshire House | |
| Former member | |
| Term in office began 2008 | |
| Term in office ended 2010 | |
| Political party | Democratic |
| Profession | Legislator |
Hardy earned an AS from Community College, Finger Lakes in Canadiagua, New York and a BA in accounting from Rivier College in Nashua, New Hampshire. She and her husband, Tim, have three children; Erica M., Heather C., and Melissa R.[1].
Elections
2010
Hardy failed to advance past the November 2, 2010 general election.
Hardy advanced past the September 14 primary election. She faced incumbent Mary Ann Knowles (D), incumbent John Knowles (D), Kevin Riley (D), incumbent Shaun Doherty (R), incumbent Lynne Ober (R), incumbent Ralph Boehm (R), incumbent Shawn Jasper (R), incumbent Lars Christiansen (R), incumbent Russell Ober (R), incumbent Laura Gandia (R), incumbent Robert Haefner (R), incumbent Jordan Ulery (R), incumbent Andrew Renzullo (R), Hal Lynde (D), Sandy Amlaw (D), SallyAnne Jeglinski (D), Richard Ingram (D), Vivian McGuire (D), Ann Clark-Balcom (D), James Caron (D), Alejandro Urrutia (D), Stuart Schneiderman (D), George Lambert (R), Jonathan Maltz (R), and Randy Brownrigg (R) in the November 2 general election.
2008
On November 4, 2008 Valerie Hardy won one of the 13 available seats to the New Hampshire House of Representatives for Hillsborough District 27, receiving 7,183 votes.
| New Hampshire House of Representatives, Hillsborough District 27 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Candidates | Votes | |||
| |
10,366 | |||
| |
10,084 | |||
| |
9,580 | |||
| |
8,531 | |||
| |
8,401 | |||
| |
8,212 | |||
| |
7,839 | |||
| |
7,792 | |||
| |
7,711 | |||
| |
7,686 | |||
| |
7,679 | |||
| |
7,399 | |||
| |
7,183 | |||
| Hanegan (R) | 7,161 | |||
| Hellwig (R) | 7,090 | |||
| Trent (R) | 6,936 | |||
| Riley (D) | 6,689 | |||
| Lynde (D) | 6,566 | |||
| Vivian McGuire (D) | 6,383 | |||
| Jeglinski (D) | 5,997 | |||
| Ingram (D) | 5,485 | |||
| Comeau (D) | 5,450 | |||
| Cesana (D) | 5,439 | |||
| Urrutia (D) | 5,377 | |||
| Schneiderman (D) | 5,188 | |||
| Boire (D) | 5,010 | |||
| Kahn (lib) | 1,826 | |||
Committee assignments
While in the New Hampshire House of Representatives, Hardy served on the following committees:
External links
- New Hampshire House of Representatives
- Project Vote Smart legislative profile
- Project Vote Smart biography
- Campaign Contributions: 2008
References
| Political offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by ' |
New Hampshire House Hillsborough 27 2008–2010 |
Succeeded by NA |
State of New Hampshire Concord (capital) | |
|---|---|
| Ballot Measures |
List of New Hampshire ballot measures | Local measures | School bond issues | Ballot measure laws | History of direct democracy | Campaign Finance Requirements | Recall process | |
| Government |
New Hampshire State Constitution | House of Representatives | Senate | Auditor | |
| State executive officers |
Governor | Attorney General | Secretary of State | Treasurer | Commissioner of Education | Commissioner of Insurance | Commissioner of Agriculture | Executive Director of Fish and Game | Commissioner of Labor | Chairman of Public Utilities | |
| Judiciary |
New Hampshire Supreme Court | Superior Court | Probate Courts | Family Courts | Judicial Nominating Commission | Judicial news | Judicial activist organizations | |
| Transparency Topics |
Right to Know Law | Transparency Checklist | Government corruption reports | Transparency Legislation | Open Records procedures | Transparency Advocates | Transparency blogs | State budget | Taxpayer-funded lobbying associations | |
| Divisions |
State |
List of Counties |
List of Cities |
List of Towns |
List of School Districts | |