New Hampshire Senate

Upper house of the New Hampshire General Court From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The New Hampshire State Senate is the upper house of the New Hampshire General Court, alongside the New Hampshire House of Representatives. The Senate has been meeting since 1784.[1] The senate consists of 24 members representing Senate districts based on population. There are 16 Republicans and 8 Democrats currently serving in the senate.

Term limits
None
New session started
December 4, 2024
Sharon Carson (R)
since December 4, 2024
Quick facts Type, Term limits ...
New Hampshire State Senate
New Hampshire General Court
Coat of arms or logo
Type
Type
Term limits
None
History
New session started
December 4, 2024
Leadership
Sharon Carson (R)
since December 4, 2024
President pro tempore
Daryl Abbas (R)
since December 4, 2024
Majority Leader
Regina Birdsell (R)
since December 4, 2024
Minority Leader
Rebecca Perkins Kwoka (D)
since December 4, 2024
Structure
Seats24
Political groups
Majority
  •   Republican (16)

Minority

Length of term
2 years
AuthorityPart Second, New Hampshire Constitution
Salary$200/term + mileage
Elections
Last election
November 5, 2024
(24 seats)
Next election
November 3, 2026
(24 seats)
RedistrictingLegislative control
Meeting place
State Senate Chamber
New Hampshire State House
Concord, New Hampshire
Website
gencourt.state.nh.us/Senate
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History

Under the 1776 Constitution, two chambers of the legislature were formed: the House of Assembly and the Council, the predecessors to the modern-day House of Representatives and Senate. The Council was originally elected by the House and was composed of 12 members: five from Rockingham County; 2 each from Cheshire County, Hillsborough County, and Strafford County; and 1 from Grafton County.[2]

In 1784, the state constitution was entirely rewritten, and the upper chamber was reconstituted as the popularly elected Senate. It was originally composed of 12 members to be elected from multi-member districts drawn by the legislature,[3] but this was increased to 24 members in 1879. Until districts were drawn, the apportionment of the Senate was continued from the 1776 Constitution. This constitution also imposed a majority-vote requirement for State Senate elections. If no candidate won a majority of the vote, a vacancy was declared and the full General Court would pick from the top 2 candidates. Similarly, if a vacancy occurred while the legislature was in session, the General Court would pick the successor from the top 2 remaining candidates. The constitution was amended in 1889 to provide that session vacancies would be filled by special elections and in 1912 to abolish the majority-vote requirement altogether.[4]

Between 1784 and 1912, more than 200 state senate vacancies were filled by a full vote of the legislature. During some years, nearly 60% of the State Senate was selected through this method, which frequently determined which party controlled the Senate majority. An analysis of the vacancy-filling patterns shows that the General Court was overwhelmingly likely to fill vacancies based on the party affiliation of the eligible candidates. In cases in which session vacancies were filled, the General Court occasionally selected 3rd-party or independent candidates, who received no more than a handful of votes, over opposing major-party candidates.[4]

The predictability of the vacancy-filling procedures sometimes led to conflict. In 1875, outgoing Democratic Governor James A. Weston exercised his constitutional power to issue "summonses" to the winners of legislative elections to avoid the General Court filling two vacancies. In 2 districts, Democratic candidates won pluralities, but not majorities; the narrow Republican majority in the State House likely meant that the Republican candidates would be elected. The Senate was tied 5–5, so the allocation of the 2 contested seats would determine control. Weston, along with the Executive Council, invalidated votes cast for Republican Senators in 2 districts on the grounds that the votes were not cast in the candidates' "Christian names." They instead issued summonses to the Democratic candidates, who were seated by the Senate. The 7–5 Democratic majority then rejected a Republican challenge to the Democrats' qualifications, and the Republican minority sought an advisory opinion from the New Hampshire Supreme Court.[4] The state supreme court concluded that "the action of the senate is final," and affirmed the seating of the Senators.[5]

In 1912, the voters approved a constitutional amendment removing the majority-vote requirement for all elections. That year, however, the gubernatorial election failed to produce a majority winner, as did 4 State Senate elections. After concluding that the amendment applied after the election, not to it, the General Court proceeded to fill the vacancies. An unexpected alliance between Democrats and Progressive Republicans led to Democrat Samuel D. Felker elected Governor, Henry F. Hollis elected to the U.S. Senate, 4 Democrats selected to fill the State Senate vacancies, and a Progressive Republican as the Speaker of the House.[6]

2025–2026 biennial session

Composition

More information Affiliation, Party (Shading indicates majority caucus) ...
Affiliation[7] Party
(Shading indicates majority caucus)
Total
Democratic Republican Vacant
End of 164th General Court 10 13 23 1
165th General Court 10 14 24 0
166th General Court 14 10 24 0
167th General Court 10 14 24 0
168th General Court 10 14 24 0
Begin 169th General Court 8 16 24 0
Latest voting share 33.3% 66.7%
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Leadership

Committee leadership

More information Committee, Chair ...
Committee[9]ChairVice ChairRanking Member
Capital Budget Mark McConkey (R)James Gray (R)David Watters (D)
Children and Family Law Daryl Abbas (R)Victoria Sullivan (R)Patrick Long (D)
Commerce Daniel Innis (R)Denise Ricciardi (R)Donovan Fenton (D)
Education Ruth Ward (R)Victoria Sullivan (R)Suzanne Prentiss (D)
Education Finance Keith Murphy (R)Timothy Lang Sr. (R)Cindy Rosenwald (D)
Election Law, Municipal Affairs and Redistricting James Gray (R)Timothy Lang Sr. (R)Rebecca Perkins Kwoka (D)
Energy and Natural Resources Kevin Avard (R)Howard Pearl (R)David Watters (D)
Executive Departments and Administration Howard Pearl (R)Tim McGough (R)Debra Altschiller (D)
Finance James Gray (R)Daniel Innis (R)Cindy Rosenwald (D)
Health and Human Services David Rochefort (R)Kevin Avard (R)Suzanne Prentiss (D)
Judiciary Bill Gannon (R)Daryl Abbas (R)Debra Altschiller (D)
Rules and Enrolled Bills Kevin Avard (R)Sharon Carson (R)Rebecca Perkins Kwoka (D)
Transportation Denise Ricciardi (R)Mark McConkey (R)Donovan Fenton (D)
Ways and Means Timothy Lang Sr. (R)Keith Murphy (R)Cindy Rosenwald (D)
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Members of the New Hampshire Senate

Map of former (March 2021) partisan composition of legislative districts for state senate:
  Republican senator
  Democratic senator
  1. Innis previously served in the state senate from 2016–2018.
  2. Avard previously served in the state senate from 2014–2018.
  3. Gannon previously served in the state senate from 2016–2018.

Past composition of the Senate

See also

References

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