New Hampshire Second Congressional District Primary Election Results New Hampshire Second Congressional District Primary Election Results
Updates Key Races Del. N.H. R.I.
LIVE
‹ See all New Hampshire state results
In the state’s Second District, seven Republicans are vying in an open race to take on Representative Annie Kuster, first elected in 2012.
Updated 3:36 AM ET
74% reported
Candidate Votes Pct.%
Robert Burns
17,369 +32.7% 32.7%
George Hansel
16,355 +30.8% 30.8%
Lily Tang Williams
13,214 +24.9% 24.9%
Total reported
53,121
+ View all candidates
Town Burns Hansel Tang Williams Total votes Est. rpt. Est. remain. votes
Nashua 35% 32% 24% 5,413 >95% <300
Salem 36% 27% 23% 3,309 >95% <100
Concord 28% 35% 24% 2,778 >95% <100
Hudson 37% 21% 30% 2,355 >95% <100
Pelham 43% 22% 22% 1,770 >95% <100
Milford 40% 26% 24% 1,426 >95% <100
Keene 18% 65% 14% 1,286 >95% <100
Atkinson 30% 31% 22% 1,252 >95% <100
Weare 24% 22% 47% 1,085 >95% <100
Hollis 24% 32% 36% 1,001 >95% <100
Bow 30% 36% 23% 884 >95% <100
Claremont 38% 29% 22% 827 >95% <100
New Ipswich 52% 20% 17% 822 >95%
New Boston 31% 29% 27% 747 >95% <100
Rindge 31% 21% 41% 717 >95% <100
Litchfield 5% 35% 43% 716 >95% <100
Pembroke 35% 31% 23% 648 >95% <100
Swanzey 21% 53% 22% 612 >95% <100
Brookline 28% 28% 28% 611 >95% <100
Hillsborough 30% 35% 27% 562 >95% <100
Hopkinton 23% 42% 28% 556 >95% <100
Lebanon 29% 35% 25% 546 >95% <100
Littleton 42% 22% 24% 537 >95% <100
New London 19% 53% 18% 535 >95% <100
Newport 30% 36% 22% 505 >95% <100
Sunapee 29% 42% 19% 479 >95% <100
Northfield 37% 23% 22% 465 >95% <100
Peterborough 23% 48% 20% 461 >95% <100
Pittsfield 38% 20% 30% 456 >95% <100
Northwood 32% 25% 29% 454 >95% <100
Dunbarton 31% 29% 28% 430 >95% <100
Haverhill 36% 22% 22% 429 >95% <100
Wilton 32% 26% 31% 417 >95% <100
Henniker 25% 40% 27% 414 >95% <100
Allenstown 46% 18% 24% 405 >95% <100
Jaffrey 39% 38% 16% 391 >95% <100
Campton 26% 22% 34% 390 >95% <100
Charlestown 40% 25% 19% 389 >95% <100
Bristol 28% 25% 34% 374 >95% <100
Winchester 27% 34% 33% 372 >95% <100
New Hampton 29% 28% 28% 368 >95% <100
Chesterfield 21% 58% 15% 359 >95% <100
Newbury 29% 37% 27% 358 >95% <100
Boscawen 29% 26% 26% 315 >95% <100
Mont Vernon 33% 33% 27% 313 >95% <100
Lancaster 44% 19% 20% 308 59% 200
Colebrook 48% 15% 21% 306 >95% <100
Warner 33% 25% 33% 302 >95% <100
Canterbury 28% 29% 30% 298 >95% <100
Walpole 25% 52% 19% 296 >95% <100
Grantham 28% 44% 19% 293 >95% <100
Plymouth 30% 26% 30% 282 >95% <100
Deering 31% 26% 31% 280 >95% <100
Antrim 23% 43% 23% 277 >95% <100
Enfield 43% 25% 20% 276 >95% <100
Bridgewater 47% 20% 22% 260 >95% <100
Lyndeborough 32% 25% 31% 251 >95% <100
Whitefield 41% 11% 20% 246 >95% <100
Hanover 27% 44% 22% 245 >95% <100
Alexandria 30% 24% 35% 241 >95% <100
Fitzwilliam 38% 29% 26% 239 >95% <100
Bethlehem 39% 20% 25% 235 >95% <100
Francestown 40% 28% 24% 235 >95% <100
Canaan 43% 25% 19% 227 >95% <100
Rumney 40% 25% 24% 225 >95% <100
Ashland 28% 32% 21% 221 >95% <100
Holderness 28% 41% 22% 221 >95% <100
Hinsdale 29% 39% 21% 214 >95% <100
Dublin 24% 48% 21% 213 >95% <100
Salisbury 24% 29% 35% 210 29% 500
Springfield 27% 49% 15% 204 >95% <100
Hancock 33% 47% 17% 202 >95% <100
Bradford 27% 27% 36% 199 >95% <100
Mason 41% 24% 26% 199 >95% <100
Center Harbor 24% 37% 23% 195 >95% <100
Gorham 41% 18% 21% 193 >95% <100
Temple 42% 28% 22% 192 >95% <100
Unity 31% 28% 26% 183 >95% <100
Woodstock 18% 21% 10% 182 70% <100
Richmond 58% 22% 16% 179 65% <100
Greenfield 42% 24% 22% 177 >95% <100
Troy 32% 35% 26% 173 >95% <100
Sandwich 36% 26% 24% 171 71% <100
Alstead 30% 43% 19% 170 >95% <100
Stoddard 25% 39% 26% 170 >95% <100
Hill 33% 29% 25% 163 >95% <100
Wilmot 34% 38% 16% 162 >95% <100
Northumberland 44% 14% 24% 158 >95% <100
Grafton 34% 23% 30% 157 >95% <100
Hebron 27% 35% 26% 152 >95% <100
Lempster 44% 20% 19% 152 >95% <100
Milan 45% 19% 24% 151 >95% <100
Plainfield 34% 28% 21% 150 >95%
Wentworth 54% 12% 23% 145 >95% <100
Marlborough 23% 48% 25% 142 9% 1,350
Bennington 46% 28% 16% 137 >95% <100
Croydon 41% 33% 22% 135 >95% <100
Lisbon 46% 20% 17% 134 >95% <100
Bath 50% 18% 21% 132 >95% <100
Franconia 32% 30% 20% 117 >95% <100
Jackson 15% 36% 18% 102 21% 400
Warren 37% 20% 23% 101 >95%
Columbia 47% 20% 20% 95 >95% —
Orford 22% 38% 26% 95 >95% —
Goshen 32% 25% 29% 93 >95% —
Stewartstown 51% 20% 17% 92 >95% —
Harrisville 13% 57% 24% 91 >95% —
Acworth 36% 22% 24% 90 >95% —
Sullivan 22% 53% 14% 88 >95% —
Lyman 41% 12% 34% 86 43% 100
Surry 18% 60% 20% 85 66% <100
Carroll 42% 23% 17% 84 >95% —
Groton 40% 24% 20% 84 >95% —
Waterville Valley 20% 49% 19% 84 >95% —
Langdon 35% 33% 18% 83 >95% —
Stark 49% 16% 22% 82 >95% —
Marlow 43% 21% 29% 76 >95% —
Lyme 27% 40% 21% 70 >95% —
Nelson 29% 44% 22% 68 7% 1,000
Sugar Hill 43% 38% 13% 61 29% 150
Errol 46% 32% 3% 59 >95% —
Benton 35% 26% 30% 57 >95% —
Shelburne 51% 23% 18% 57 >95% —
Landaff 34% 28% 28% 50 60% <30
Easton 40% 11% 28% 47 >95% —
Stratford 31% 22% 20% 45 39% <100
Windsor 36% 21% 23% 39 10% 350
Dummer 53% 17% 14% 36 >95% —
Orange 16% 16% 44% 32 22% 100
Randolph 53% 13% 25% 32 11% 250
Roxbury 17% 67% 6% 18 32% <40
Millsfield 33% 33% 33% 12 4% 300
Ellsworth 10% 20% 70% 10 >95%
Wentworth’s Location 0% 100% 0% 1 3% <30
Albany 0% 0% 0% 0 0% <80
Amherst 0% 0% 0% 0 0% 1,650
Andover 0% 0% 0% 0 0% 300
Berlin 0% 0% 0% 0 0% 650
Chichester 0% 0% 0% 0 0% 450
Clarksville 0% 0% 0% 0 0% <40
Cornish 0% 0% 0% 0 0% 150
Dalton 0% 0% 0% 0 0% 150
Danbury 0% 0% 0% 0 0% 200
Deerfield 0% 0% 0% 0 0% 900
Dixville 0% 0% 0% 0 0% —
Dorchester 0% 0% 0% 0 0% <60
Epsom 0% 0% 0% 0 0% 700
Franklin 0% 0% 0% 0 0% 1,000
Gilsum 0% 0% 0% 0 0% 100
Greenville 0% 0% 0% 0 0% 200
Jefferson 0% 0% 0% 0 0% 300
Lincoln 0% 0% 0% 0 0% 150
Loudon 0% 0% 0% 0 0% 1,800
Monroe 0% 0% 0% 0 0% 300
Piermont 0% 0% 0% 0 0% 250
Pittsburg 0% 0% 0% 0 0% 100
Sharon 0% 0% 0% 0 0% 450
Sutton 0% 0% 0% 0 0% 200
Thornton 0% 0% 0% 0 0% 250
Washington 0% 0% 0% 0 0% 150
Webster 0% 0% 0% 0 0% 650
Westmoreland 0% 0% 0% 0 0% 100
Windham 0% 0% 0% 0 0% 1,400
+ View all
‹ ›
Trip Gabriel 9:47 PM ET
Independents outnumber both Democrats and Republicans in N.H. and can vote in either primary. In a few days, we'll know how many chose to vote in the G.O.P. races — the only competitive ones tonight — which will indicate the broad enthusiasm (or lack thereof) for those candidates in November.
Trip Gabriel 9:34 PM ET
Rockingham County, N.H., along the Massachusetts border in the southeast corner, is the state’s reddest county. Few returns are in yet, but watch to see how strongly Bolduc does there, even in Salem, Morse’s hometown.
Maggie Astor 9:18 PM ET
Lydia York, a lawyer and former corporate accountant, defeated Delaware’s incumbent auditor of accounts, Kathleen K. McGuiness, in a Democratic primary. McGuiness had been convicted of misdemeanors related to hiring her daughter.
Maggie Astor 8:42 PM ET
Gregg Amore, a state representative, won the Democratic primary for Rhode Island secretary of state. His Republican opponent will be Pat Cortellessa, the supervisor of a security company who volunteered for the Trump campaign in 2016.
Maggie Astor 8:39 PM ET
Lt. Gov. Sabina Matos of Rhode Island, who is seeking her first full term, won the Democratic primary for lieutenant governor. Aaron Guckian, a development officer at the Rhode Island Foundation, won the Republican primary.
Blake Hounshell 8:34 PM ET
Rhode Island’s second congressional district will be a great general-election race. The Democratic nominee, Seth Magaziner, originally contemplated a run for governor but saw a better opportunity in Representative Jim Langevin’s old seat.
Blake Hounshell 8:16 PM ET
Senator Maggie Hassan bet early that abortion would be a major issue in her bid for re-election. She has hammered Republicans for what she says is an extreme position, mindful that the issue plays differently in New Hampshire than many red states.
Trip Gabriel 8h ago
Is there a bellwether town in N.H. to watch for how the night is going in the G.O.P. primaries? Dante Scala, a political science professor, told NHJournal he would be watching Bedford because “it’s a large Republican town where no major candidate has a ‘home field’ advantage.”
Maggie Astor 11h ago
Senate candidates’ Twitter feeds and news releases suggest Democrats in close races are eager to talk about the 15-week abortion ban proposed today. Republicans, not so much — they’re focused on today’s inflation report instead.
Maggie Astor 14h ago
Senator Lindsey Graham cast a newly proposed 15-week abortion ban as a “late-term” ban, but 15 weeks is early in the second trimester. This has been a common tactic: rhetorically emphasizing abortions late in pregnancy, but targeting them earlier.
Jonathan Weisman 16h ago
Republicans had been hedging their bets on the economy, shifting their focus to crime, the border and other issues. But Tuesday’s news that inflation remains high has G.O.P. strategists back on economic struggles as the core of their fall campaigns.
Updated 1:51 AM ET
Candidate
Ann McLane Kuster* Uncontested
* Incumbent
Read full article on The New York Times-US
America Politics
Comments
Leave a comment in Nestia App