HomeNewsOpinionNew Hampshire's changing demographics could help Nikki Haley

New Hampshire's changing demographics could help Nikki Haley

After a dismal loss to Donald Trump in Iowa, Nikki Haley is hoping to benefit from a more moderate electorate and the prospect of independent voters participating in the GOP primary. New Hampshire is her last chance to slow the MAGA train before it heads south to Fortress Dixie

January 23, 2024 / 16:54 IST
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Republican Party
New Hampshire, with its quality public schools and low levels of gun violence, has far more in common with its New England neighbors than with the red states that define and dominate the Republican Party. (Source: Bloomberg)

The US-Mexico border is a contentious issue as New Hampshire Republicans go to the polls Tuesday to choose a Republican nominee for president. The state’s border with Massachusetts may be an even more pressing issue.

Indeed, when former Republican US Senator Kelly Ayotte announced her campaign for governor in July, she cast the stakes of the 2024 election in most dire terms. "We are one election away from becoming Massachusetts in New Hampshire,” Ayotte said.  In her version of border-war politics, the northern Massachusetts cities of Lowell and Lawrence play the role of Juarez and Tijuana, flooding New Hampshire with fentanyl smuggled across the state line.  

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New Hampshire even has a local variant on the “Great Replacement,” the conspiracy theory that casts demographic change as a Democratic plot to obliterate White Americans. Except in New Hampshire, where nine of 10 residents are (still) non-Hispanic White, the invasion is more about space than race.

Median mortgage costs in New Hampshire are about $300 cheaper than in Massachusetts. For years, desperados from Massachusetts have been crossing the border for bigger houses and lower taxes. According to Brookings Institution demographer William Frey, fully one-quarter of New Hampshire’s current population was born in Massachusetts.

A  report  released last week by University of New Hampshire political scientists documented how recent population churn has shaped the potential electorate: In the past four years, the state gained 245,000 potential new voters, between newcomers moving to the state and young people reaching voting age. In the same period, 208,000 longtime residents left the state or died. As a result, 22 percent of potential Granite State voters next week were either too young to vote (6 percent) or did not reside in New Hampshire (16 percent) in 2020