

Dietsch is running for re-election against Republican Denise Ricciardi of Bedford, in a district that includes the local communities of Dublin, Fitzwilliam, Greenfield, Hancock, Jaffrey, Peterborough, Richmond and Troy. Jeanne Dietsch, a Peterborough Democrat who represents District 9. Kuster held a similar news conference to share information on voting Friday afternoon in Peterborough, where she was joined by N.H. will deliver the mail.”Īnd, of course, she added, voters can still cast their ballots in person on Election Day at polling places she said will follow COVID-19 health and safety protocols like requiring masks and enforcing physical distancing. But I’m confident that if you mail it early enough, that the post office. “You can get an absentee ballot and hand-deliver it to your town clerk now, so that you don’t have to be concerned or worried about the mail. “We want, with these events, to make sure that people understand their options,” Kuster said. If people choose to vote by mail, Kuster said they should send their ballot back at least a week before the election to ensure it arrives by 5 p.m. People who choose this option can then return their ballot to their city or town clerk’s office by hand, or send it in the mail. “There are plenty of safe ways to vote.”įor instance, Kuster said, any New Hampshire voter can request an absentee ballot this year by citing concern over COVID-19. “You don’t have to choose between being safe or voting,” said Fenton, who is running unopposed for re-election.
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House of Representatives, joined Kuster at her event on Central Square in Keene, and reiterated that voters have a variety of options for how to cast their ballot this fall. She faces a challenge in the general election from Steve Negron, a Republican from Nashua, and Libertarian candidate Andrew Olding, also of Nashua.ĭonovan Fenton, a Keene Democrat who represents Cheshire County District 8 in the N.H. representative in New Hampshire’s 2nd Congressional District, which includes the entire Monadnock Region. Kuster is seeking her fifth term as a U.S. Kuster herself voted Thursday in Hopkinton, she said, by going to the town clerk’s office, requesting an absentee ballot and filling it out on the spot. The future of our planet and our environment is on the ballot.

Our women’s reproductive rights and our economy are on the ballot.

“Honestly, in my lifetime, I don’t think there’s ever been a more important election,” Kuster, 63, of Hopkinton, said at the news conference. 3 general election, and visited several local businesses to learn how they have fared during the COVID-19 pandemic.Īt her first stop, a news conference on Keene’s Central Square, Kuster, D-N.H., said Granite Staters have more ways than ever before to vote this year, in what she views as a critical election. Annie Kuster campaigned in the Monadnock Region Friday, where she encouraged voters to make a plan to cast their ballot in the Nov.
