2016 New Hampshire gubernatorial election
http://dbpedia.org/resource/2016_New_Hampshire_gubernatorial_election an entity of type: Thing
The 2016 New Hampshire gubernatorial election took place on November 8, 2016, to elect the governor of New Hampshire, concurrently with the 2016 U.S. presidential election, as well as elections to the United States Senate, elections to the United States House of Representatives and various state and local elections. The primaries were held on September 13.
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2016 New Hampshire gubernatorial election
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Democratic Party
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Chris Sununu
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354040
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Republican Party
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Democratic Party
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Derek Dextraze
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Ian Freeman
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John Lavoie
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New Hampshire
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2016-11-08
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2016
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* Jeb Bradley, New Hampshire Senate Majority Leader
* The Keene Sentinel
* Nashua Telegraph
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;Individuals
* Charles Bass, former U.S. Representative
* Scott Brown, former United States Senator from Massachusetts
* Bill Cahill, former Executive Councilor
* Louis Georgopoulos, former Executive Councilor
* Judd Gregg, former Governor of New Hampshire
* Ruth Griffin, former Executive Councilor
* John Kasich, Governor of Ohio and 2016 presidential candidate
* Joseph Kenney, Executive Councilor
* Steve Merrill, former Governor of New Hampshire
* Chuck Morse, President of the New Hampshire Senate
* Earl Rinker, former Executive Councilor
* Dan St. Hilaire, former Executive Councilor
* Raymond Wieczorek, former Executive Councilor
;Newspapers
* Concord Monitor
* The Portsmouth Herald
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* New Hampshire Union Leader
* Susan B. Anthony List
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* 603 Alliance
* New Hampshire Liberty Alliance
* Fifty-seven current members of the New Hampshire House of Representatives: Chris Adams, Glen Aldrich, Keith Ammon, John Balcom, Steven Beaudoin, Rick Christie, James Coffey, Allen Cook, Susan Delemus, Dan Donovan, Eric Eastman, Tracy Emerick, Elizabeth Ferreira, Valerie Fraser, Harold French, Bart Fromuth, Dick Gordon, Linda Gould, Warren Groen, Joe Hannon, J.R. Hoell, Edith Hogan, Werner Horn, Ray Howard, Paul Ingbretson, Dan Itse, Tom Kaczynski, Joe Lachance, Don Lebrun, Don McClarren, Jim McConnell, Mark McLean, Carol McGuire, Dan McGuire, Josh Moore, Bill Ohm, Jeff Oligny, Jason Parent, Joe Pitre, Katherine Prudhomme-O'Brien, Kimberly Rice, Eric Schleien, Carl Seidel, Tammy Simmons, Kathleen Souza, Greg Smith, James Spillane, Victoria Sullivan, Mike Sylvia, Dan Tamburello, Len Turcotte, Jordan Ulery, Peter Varney, Michael Vose, Joshua Whitehouse, Ted Wright, Kurt Wuelper
* The Conway Daily Sun
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Tie:
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Sununu:
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Van Ostern:
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2018
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2018
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no
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Democratic Party
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Republican Party
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Libertarian Party
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1.28
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17.72
20.47
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25.29
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30.68
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4.31
48.84
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2014
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2014
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Governor
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Hypothetical polling
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Chris Sununu
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Frank Edelblut
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Jeanie Forrester
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Ted Gatsas
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background:#cff
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presidential
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1991
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Republican Party
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border:solid 1px silver; padding:8px; background:white;
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The 2016 New Hampshire gubernatorial election took place on November 8, 2016, to elect the governor of New Hampshire, concurrently with the 2016 U.S. presidential election, as well as elections to the United States Senate, elections to the United States House of Representatives and various state and local elections. The primaries were held on September 13. Incumbent Democratic Governor Maggie Hassan was eligible to run for re-election to a third term in office, but she instead successfully ran for the U.S. Senate against incumbent Kelly Ayotte. In the general election, Republican nominee Chris Sununu defeated Democrat Colin Van Ostern and Libertarian state representative Max Abramson to become the first Republican governor of New Hampshire elected since 2002. With a margin of 2.27%, this election was the second-closest race of the 2016 gubernatorial election cycle, behind only the election in North Carolina.
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2016-11-08
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2016 New Hampshire gubernatorial election