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Again, I want express my warm thanks for all of your support, and I look forward to working on your behalf and earning your continued support

The transition from campaign to governance has been a smooth and speedy one. I have assumed my senate duties including my three senate committee assignments: Wildlife and Agriculture;  Transportation and Interstate Cooperation; and Capital Budget.

When I moved into my office it was barren. I truly believe that the office and senate seat belong to the people of State Senate district 16. In that spirit, I have decorated  the office with historic pictures and prints that have been either  acquired or given to me on loan from the Town Historic Societies from the four towns in district 16 (Candia, Hooksett, Bow and Dunbarton) and the city of Manchester. Special thanks goes out to Rep. Eric Anderson of Bow who supplied me with three spectacular photographs depicting Bow’s history.  Comments thus far have been very positive!

The office is conveniently located at Room 102 on the first floor of the Legislative Office Building. Many folks from the district have already stopped by to say hello. Deb Martone, my newly hired assistant, is very personable and she does a great job keeping my appointment schedule and working on constituent issues. If you would like to either stop by  for a visit, or if you require assistance with an issue, please contact either Deb or me at 271-2709.

I  recently agreed to be auctioned off at a Manchester City Rotary Club Charity Dinner. The winning bidder, Claira Monier, for her generous charitable donation won a tour of the State House to be given by me and lunch with me on my tab at the Common Man Restaurant in Concord. 

I welcome visitors and I enjoy giving tours of the State House.  Please stop in!  This is your office.

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The liberal tax-and-spend Democrats have been recently spouting their “less-than-honest” talking points in the op-ed pages of the Union Leader and other dailies across the state that they passed a responsible budget this year.

The liberal line goes like this – they “had to make difficult choices to adopt a responsible and balanced budget in these difficult times”.  The fact of the matter is that their budget is neither responsible nor balanced.

Is it a responsible budget? You be the judge. Their budget that passed in June increased from $10.4B to $11.5B, or by $1.0B which is a whopping 10.5% growth in spending.  And, I remind you spending in the previous budget grew by 12.5%. So, it needs to be said – over and over - that overall democrat spending has climbed 23% since the Democrats gained majority control in 2007.

The Democrats budget passed is a shell game that relies on inflated revenues, one-time federal handouts, a $110M raid on the private malpractice insurance fund and the downshifting of $90M of cost to cities and towns whose struggling property owners will now have to carry a higher tax burden.

Is the budget balanced? You be the judge. The Democrat budget includes an accounting gimmick (reminiscent of what we see coming out of Washington) that takes $208M of the general fund books and places it into stand-alone dedicated funds. Voila! – the tax-and-spenders claim that they have reduced spending. Not so!

To make matters worse, the tax-and-spenders left a “ticking time bomb” in a hidden closet under the state house dome before they went home for summer recess. That “ticking time bomb” is a $600M deficit projected by the non-partisan Legislative Budget Office come 2011 that could grow to over $700M if the State Supreme Court agrees with the State Superior Court and rules that the state’s raid on the $110M JUA fund is unconstitutional.

Also, if this budget was balanced and responsible as the Democrats say it is, then why are 150 cities and towns and over 50 school districts preparing a lawsuit against the state for handing local taxpayers higher bills?

Apparently, responsible budgeting is in the eye of the beholder!

Other Campaign News

Momentum grows every day in my State Senate run. New folks have signed onto my Finance Committee and onto my various campaign coalitions.

  • I am attending an HYAA sponsored pancake breakfast Saturday August 22nd that is being held to raise funds for the Roger Bjonrberg Family Memorial Fund. It is only $5.00 so I hope as many of you who can attend will join me in supporting this worthy cause.
  • I am marching at 11 AM in the Candia Old Home Day Parade on Saturday August 29th.  I have acquired a new banner and I will have an antique car in the parade.
  • I am also marching in the Dunbarton Old Home Day Parade on Saturday September 12th. More details to come.
  • I am attending the Hooksett Holy Rosary Church Picnic on Sunday September 13th. More details to come.
  • I am attending the Bow Men’s Club Annual “Lobsta” Fest Saturday evening September 26th.

Please mark these events on your calendar. I will need your help at these events. If you can help me, please contact me at 203-5391.

I also want to remind my supporters that if you have not contributed to my campaign yet you can do by clicking on the Contributions page.

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bookable event

Host Susanna Hargreaves

6:30 pm RSVP 624-5581

David looks forward to meeting neighbors and friends in the Alderwood Ct. and Evelyn Drive neighborhoods.



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Dear Friends,

On June 9, I announced my candidacy for the state Senate District 16 seat. I am running because like you, I am concerned with the direction this state has taken over the last 2 years.

Both the NH House and Senate have passed budgets that are fiscally irresponsible. Both budgets increase spending by more than 11% while state revenues have shrunk during a deepening recession. To pay for this, the Democrats have raised taxes, hiked fees, and downshifted costs to property taxpayers. Families are struggling to pay their mortgages and put food on the table, small businesses are trying to keep their doors open and people working, so why in the world would we be asking them to pay even more?

It’s time that state government cut spending instead of raising taxes. As a member of the House Ways & Means Committee, I’ve voted against every one of these taxes, fee increases and downshifting of costs. As a member of the Senate, I will do exactly the same thing. State departments need to prioritize programs and services and make difficult budget decisions. These are the same decisions that all of us are making every day during this recession and it’s time that state government did the same.
 
Please join my efforts to bring common sense and fiscal conservatism back to the State House. Sign up today and thank you in advance for your help.

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