Jordan Applewhite

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Jordan Applewhite

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Elections and appointments
Last election

November 8, 2022

Jordan Applewhite (Democratic Party) ran for election to the New Hampshire House of Representatives to represent Grafton 1. Applewhite lost in the general election on November 8, 2022.

Applewhite completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2022. Click here to read the survey answers.

Elections

2022

See also: New Hampshire House of Representatives elections, 2022

General election

General election for New Hampshire House of Representatives Grafton 1 (3 seats)

The following candidates ran in the general election for New Hampshire House of Representatives Grafton 1 on November 8, 2022.

Candidate
%
Votes
Matthew Simon (R)
 
18.4
 
2,358
Image of David Rochefort
David Rochefort (R)
 
17.9
 
2,292
Linda Massimilla (D)
 
16.9
 
2,171
Image of Calvin Beaulier
Calvin Beaulier (R)
 
16.1
 
2,058
Jordan Applewhite (D) Candidate Connection
 
15.5
 
1,984
Image of Timothy Egan
Timothy Egan (D)
 
15.3
 
1,958
 Other/Write-in votes
 
0.0
 
1

Total votes: 12,822
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Democratic primary election

Democratic primary for New Hampshire House of Representatives Grafton 1 (3 seats)

Incumbent Linda Massimilla, Jordan Applewhite, and incumbent Timothy Egan advanced from the Democratic primary for New Hampshire House of Representatives Grafton 1 on September 13, 2022.

Candidate
%
Votes
Linda Massimilla
 
37.1
 
498
Jordan Applewhite Candidate Connection
 
31.8
 
428
Image of Timothy Egan
Timothy Egan
 
30.4
 
409
 Other/Write-in votes
 
0.7
 
9

Total votes: 1,344
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team.

Republican primary election

Republican primary for New Hampshire House of Representatives Grafton 1 (3 seats)

Incumbent Matthew Simon, David Rochefort, and Calvin Beaulier advanced from the Republican primary for New Hampshire House of Representatives Grafton 1 on September 13, 2022.

Candidate
%
Votes
Matthew Simon
 
38.3
 
756
Image of David Rochefort
David Rochefort
 
32.6
 
643
Image of Calvin Beaulier
Calvin Beaulier
 
28.8
 
567
 Other/Write-in votes
 
0.3
 
6

Total votes: 1,972
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team.

Campaign themes

2022

Ballotpedia survey responses

See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection

Candidate Connection

Jordan Applewhite completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2022. The survey questions appear in bold and are followed by Applewhite's responses. Candidates are asked three required questions for this survey, but they may answer additional optional questions as well.

Expand all | Collapse all

I'm a business founder, maple farm worker, and community organizer. The first time my wife and I visited the North Country we knew immediately that this is where we wanted home to be. We were drawn in by the affordable housing, natural beauty, and deeply rooted sense of community. More recently, the future we hoped for feels uncertain. Housing prices have shot through the roof. There's a shortage of childcare. Property taxes are nearly the highest in the nation. There’s effectively a 0% rental vacancy rate, and rents are rising. There’s little available commercial property. Small businesses struggle to hire new workers because there’s nowhere for them to live. Heating and energy prices are skyrocketing from our state's reliance on fossil fuel. The window of opportunity we climbed through feels like it’s closing behind us, and that doesn’t sit right with me. We need to build a future for our district where local always comes first. In this future, we're in charge of our destiny rather than big corporations. I can see a thriving local economy, vibrant culture, pristine woods and waterways, and an abundance of cheap, clean energy. I see enough housing and child care to support workers, growing families, and even a few new folks who want to share their gifts with us. I see high-quality education and healthcare for all. Our community already has everything it needs to thrive, but politicians are standing in the way.
  • Our district desperately needs to fix the housing shortage. A reasonable rental vacancy rate is about 5%, NH’s is currently less than 1%, and in our district it’s effectively 0%. If we love this place and want it to continue thriving we need to act. There are low cost and no cost zoning strategies that we can enact locally and in the state legislature to chip away at this problem. There are market incentives like the state’s current plan that I hope will help. We can also directly fund the construction of energy efficient, architecturally beautiful, community oriented, mixed income public housing. It may take all of these tactics to get it done. And most importantly, we need young people to step up and run for their local planning boards!
  • In NH, almost all public school funding comes from local property taxes. For years, the NH Republican party has cut state funding for public schools in order to hand out tax breaks to wealthy corporations that don’t need them. This is wrong. I believe that a child’s zip code shouldn’t determine the quality of their education. Even worse, the new school voucher program forces you to pay more in property taxes so wealthy people can be reimbursed for sending their kids to private school. The tax burden for the voucher program falls disproportionately on rural districts like ours. This system pits taxpayers against local schools that are already stretched thin. If this keeps up, our rural public schools will be forced to close.
  • Housing isn’t the only thing in short supply. We’re also facing a severe shortage of affordable child care options. It’s not uncommon for local child care centers to have a wait time of more than half a year. Even if you can wait that long, the high cost often means that in a two income household it makes more financial sense for one parent to quit their job rather than work full time to afford the bill. Like with housing, there is effectively no public market for child care here anymore. People find solutions by word of mouth, by leaning on their families and communities. It limits the potential of our district. We need the state to fund high quality child care options so parents don’t have to choose between families and their careers.
I’m an unflinching, unapologetic advocate for LGBTQ+ rights and racial justice. I believe our communities are stronger, more adaptable, more successful, and more vibrant when we create a safe and welcoming environment for everyone. I’m a delegate at-large for NH Stonewall Democrats. I’ve testified in Concord to support the rights of LGBTQ+ youth. My mother was a political asylum seeker from Cuba. I’m not afraid to pressure either party when their support for civil rights falls short of what the Constitution promises us.

I support a rapid transition off of fossil fuels to clean, renewable energy. It’s not just the moral thing to do, it’s in our own financial interest. It’s our kids and grandkids who will face the most severe consequences of the infrastructure decisions we’re making now. We can’t keep borrowing from their future just to make oil billionaires rich, knowing that it’s leading us towards ecological collapse. Clean energy technology lets us generate what we need right here in the north country. Littleton already has cheap, clean energy thanks to Moore Dam, but the rest of our district is facing rate hikes as high as 100%+ due to our over reliance on natural gas. Everyone in our district can benefit from good paying jobs upgrading old oil burners to modern heat pumps, installing community solar, and retrofitting homes with better insulation. We can lower your energy bills while gaining immunity to supply chain instability and price shocks in global oil markets.

Note: Ballotpedia reserves the right to edit Candidate Connection survey responses. Any edits made by Ballotpedia will be clearly marked with [brackets] for the public. If the candidate disagrees with an edit, he or she may request the full removal of the survey response from Ballotpedia.org. Ballotpedia does not edit or correct typographical errors unless the candidate's campaign requests it.

See also


External links

Footnotes


Representatives
Belknap 1
Belknap 2
Belknap 3
Belknap 4
Belknap 7
Belknap 8
Carroll 1
Tom Buco (D)
Carroll 2
Carroll 3
Carroll 4
Carroll 5
Carroll 6
Carroll 7
Carroll 8
Cheshire 1
Cheshire 10
Cheshire 11
Cheshire 12
Cheshire 13
Cheshire 14
John Hunt (R)
Cheshire 15
Cheshire 16
Cheshire 17
Cheshire 18
Cheshire 2
Dru Fox (D)
Cheshire 3
Cheshire 4
Cheshire 5
Cheshire 6
Cheshire 7
Cheshire 8
Cheshire 9
Coos 1
Coos 2
Coos 3
Coos 4
Seth King (R)
Coos 5
Coos 6
Coos 7
Grafton 10
Grafton 11
Grafton 13
Grafton 14
Grafton 15
Grafton 16
Grafton 17
Grafton 18
Grafton 2
Grafton 3
Grafton 4
Grafton 6
Grafton 7
Grafton 8
Grafton 9
Hillsborough 1
Hillsborough 10
Bill Ohm (R)
Hillsborough 11
Hillsborough 14
Hillsborough 15
Hillsborough 16
Hillsborough 17
Hillsborough 18
Hillsborough 19
Matt Drew (R)
Hillsborough 20
Hillsborough 21
Hillsborough 22
Hillsborough 23
Hillsborough 24
Hillsborough 25
Hillsborough 26
Hillsborough 27
Hillsborough 28
Keith Erf (R)
Hillsborough 29
Hillsborough 3
Hillsborough 30
Hillsborough 31
Hillsborough 32
Hillsborough 33
Hillsborough 34
Hillsborough 35
Hillsborough 36
Hillsborough 37
Hillsborough 38
Hillsborough 39
Hillsborough 4
Hillsborough 40
Hillsborough 41
Lily Foss (D)
Hillsborough 42
Lisa Post (R)
Hillsborough 43
Hillsborough 44
Hillsborough 45
Hillsborough 5
Hillsborough 6
Hillsborough 7
Hillsborough 8
Hillsborough 9
Merrimack 1
Merrimack 10
Merrimack 11
Merrimack 12
Merrimack 13
Merrimack 14
Merrimack 15
Merrimack 16
Merrimack 17
Merrimack 18
Merrimack 19
Merrimack 2
Merrimack 20
Merrimack 21
Merrimack 22
Merrimack 23
Merrimack 24
Merrimack 25
Merrimack 26
Alvin See (R)
Merrimack 27
Merrimack 28
Merrimack 29
Merrimack 3
Merrimack 30
Merrimack 4
Merrimack 5
Merrimack 6
Merrimack 7
Merrimack 8
Merrimack 9
Rockingham 1
Rockingham 10
Rockingham 11
Rockingham 12
Zoe Manos (D)
Rockingham 14
Pam Brown (R)
Rockingham 15
Rockingham 18
Rockingham 19
Rockingham 2
Rockingham 20
Rockingham 21
Rockingham 22
Rockingham 23
Rockingham 24
Rockingham 26
Rockingham 27
Rockingham 28
Rockingham 29
Rockingham 3
Mary Ford (R)
Rockingham 30
Rockingham 31
Terry Roy (R)
Rockingham 32
Rockingham 33
Rockingham 34
Rockingham 35
Rockingham 36
Rockingham 37
Rockingham 38
Rockingham 39
Rockingham 4
Rockingham 40
Rockingham 5
Rockingham 6
Rockingham 7
Rockingham 8
Rockingham 9
Strafford 1
Strafford 11
Strafford 13
Strafford 14
Strafford 15
Strafford 16
Strafford 17
Strafford 18
Strafford 19
Strafford 20
Strafford 21
Luz Bay (D)
Strafford 3
Strafford 4
Strafford 5
Strafford 6
Strafford 7
Strafford 8
Strafford 9
Sullivan 1
Sullivan 2
Sullivan 3
Sullivan 4
Judy Aron (R)
Sullivan 5
Sullivan 6
Sullivan 7
Sullivan 8
Republican Party (219)
Democratic Party (177)
Independent (1)