New Hampshire Republican State Committee
The New Hampshire Republican Party is the affiliate of the United States Republican Party in New Hampshire. Its executive committee is headed by Chairman Chris Ager.
Elected officials
Republicans have a state government trifecta in New Hampshire, as it holds the Governorship and majorities in both state legislative chambers.
Members of Congress
U.S. Senate
- None
Both of New Hampshire's U.S. Senate seats have been held by Democrats since 2017. Kelly Ayotte was the last Republican to represent New Hampshire in the U.S. Senate. Elected in 2010, she lost re-election in 2016.
U.S. House of Representatives
- None
New Hampshire has been represented exclusively in the U.S. Senate by Democrats since 2017. Frank Guinta was the last Republican to represent New Hampshire in the House of Representatives. Re-elected to a non-consecutive second term in 2014, Guinta was defeated again by Carol Shea-Porter in 2016, the fourth consecutive election where they faced each other (Guinta had previously unseated Shea-Porter in 2010 but lost in their 2012 rematch).
State government
- Governor: Chris Sununu
- Senate Leader: Jeb Bradley
- House Leader: Sherman Packard
Executive committee
- Chair: Chris Ager
- Vice Chair: Ryan Terrell
- National Committeewoman: Juliana Bergeron
- National Committeeman: Bill O'Brien
- Treasurer: Alan Glassman
- Assistant Treasurer: Jim MacEachern
- Secretary: Jane Lane
- Assistant Secretary: Terry Reiber
Former chairpersons
- Fergus Cullen[2]
- Stephen Duprey
- Jeanie Forrester
- Warren Henderson
- Jennifer Horn — 2014–2017
- Shirley Hodgdon[3]
- William Johnson
- Jack Kimball
- Wayne MacDonald
- Jayne Millerick
- Wayne Semprini
- John Stabile
- John H. Sununu 2009–2011
Notes
External links
- Republican Party of New Hampshire
- v
- t
- e
- History
- National Union Party
- Third Party System
- Fourth Party System
- Fifth Party System
- Sixth Party System
tickets,
national
conventions,
and
presidential
primaries
- 1856 (Philadelphia): Frémont/Dayton
- 1860 (Chicago): Lincoln/Hamlin
- 1864 (Baltimore): Lincoln/Johnson
- 1868 (Chicago): Grant/Colfax
- 1872 (Philadelphia): Grant/Wilson
- 1876 (Cincinnati): Hayes/Wheeler
- 1880 (Chicago): Garfield/Arthur
- 1884 (Chicago): Blaine/Logan
- 1888 (Chicago): Harrison/Morton
- 1892 (Minneapolis): Harrison/Reid
- 1896 (Saint Louis): McKinley/Hobart
- 1900 (Philadelphia): McKinley/Roosevelt
- 1904 (Chicago): Roosevelt/Fairbanks
- 1908 (Chicago): Taft/Sherman
- 1912 (Chicago): Taft/Sherman/Butler
- 1916 (Chicago): Hughes/Fairbanks
- 1920 (Chicago): Harding/Coolidge
- 1924 (Cleveland): Coolidge/Dawes
- 1928 (Kansas City): Hoover/Curtis
- 1932 (Chicago): Hoover/Curtis
- 1936 (Cleveland): Landon/Knox
- 1940 (Philadelphia): Willkie/McNary
- 1944 (Chicago): Dewey/Bricker
- 1948 (Philadelphia): Dewey/Warren
- 1952 (Chicago): Eisenhower/Nixon
- 1956 (San Francisco): Eisenhower/Nixon
- 1960 (Chicago): Nixon/Lodge
- 1964 (San Francisco): Goldwater/Miller
- 1968 (Miami Beach): Nixon/Agnew
- 1972 (Miami Beach): Nixon/Agnew
- 1976 (Kansas City): Ford/Dole
- 1980 (Detroit): Reagan/G. H. W. Bush
- 1984 (Dallas): Reagan/G. H. W. Bush
- 1988 (New Orleans): G. H. W. Bush/Quayle
- 1992 (Houston): G. H. W. Bush/Quayle
- 1996 (San Diego): Dole/Kemp
- 2000 (Philadelphia): G. W. Bush/Cheney
- 2004 (New York): G. W. Bush/Cheney
- 2008 (St. Paul): McCain/Palin
- 2012 (Tampa): Romney/Ryan
- 2016 (Cleveland): Trump/Pence
- 2020 (Charlotte/other locations): Trump/Pence
- 2024 (Milwaukee): Trump (presumptive)/TBA
- 2028 (Houston)
administrations
- Lincoln (1861–1865)
- Johnson (1865–1868)
- Grant (1869–1877)
- Hayes (1877–1881)
- Garfield (1881)
- Arthur (1881–1885)
- Harrison (1889–1893)
- McKinley (1897–1901)
- Roosevelt (1901–1909)
- Taft (1909–1913)
- Harding (1921–1923)
- Coolidge (1923–1929)
- Hoover (1929–1933)
- Eisenhower (1953–1961)
- Nixon (1969–1974)
- Ford (1974–1977)
- Reagan (1981–1989)
- G. H. W. Bush (1989–1993)
- G. W. Bush (2001–2009)
- Trump (2017–2021)
leaders
and
Conference
chairs
- J. P. Hale (1859–1862)
- Anthony (1862–1884)
- Sherman (1884–1885)
- Edmunds (1885–1891)
- Sherman (1891–1897)
- Allison (1897–1908)
- E. Hale (1908–1911)
- Cullom (1911–1913)
- Gallinger (1913–1918)
- Lodge (1918–1924)
- Curtis (1924–1929)
- Watson (1929–1933)
- McNary (1933–1940)
- Austin (1940–1941)
- McNary (1941–1944)
- White (1944–1949)
- Wherry (1949–1952)
- Bridges (1952–1953)
- Taft (1953)
- Knowland (1953–1959)
- Dirksen (1959–1969)
- Scott (1969–1977)
- Baker (1977–1979)
- Stevens (1979–1980)
- Baker (1980–1985)
- Dole (1985–1996)
- Lott (1996–2003)
- Frist (2003–2007)
- McConnell (2007–)
leaders,
Speakers,
and
Conference
chairs
- Pennington (1860–1861)
- Grow (1861–1863)
- Colfax (1863–1869)
- Pomeroy (1869)
- Blaine (1869–1875)
- McCrary (1875–1877)
- Hale (1877–1879)
- Frye (1879–1881)
- Keifer (1881–1883)
- Cannon (1883–1889)
- Reed (1889–1891)
- T. J. Henderson (1891–1895)
- Reed (1895–1899)
- D. B. Henderson (1899–1903)
- Cannon (1903–1911)
- Mann (1911–1919)
- Gillett (1919–1925)
- Longworth (1925–1931)
- Snell (1931–1939)
- Martin (1939–1959)
- Halleck (1959–1965)
- Ford (1965–1973)
- Rhodes (1973–1981)
- Michel (1981–1995)
- Gingrich (1995–1999)
- Hastert (1999–2007)
- Boehner (2007–2015)
- Ryan (2015–2019)
- McCarthy (2019–2023)
- Johnson (2023–)
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