Jackie Harris
Morning Edition ProducerJackie Harris is the Morning Edition Producer at NHPR. She first joined NHPR in 2021 as the Morning Edition Fellow, and she's previously reported and produced for Lemonada Media, New England Public Media, Utah Public Radio, and Connecticut Public Radio. You can email her at jharris@nhpr.org.
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NHPR has been talking with voters around the state about what issues are on their mind ahead of the New Hampshire Primary. One issue we keep hearing about is the high cost of living.
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Biden’s supporters are launching a write-in campaign encouraging Granite Staters to still choose him as their nominee since he won't be on the ballot. In 1968, Democrats also ran a write-in campaign for then-President Lyndon B. Johnson.
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Christie had faced repeated questions about dropping out from voters and from the press. His answer has tended to be, “I'll be staying in this race because no Republican is really running against Donald Trump.”
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After a similar bill was defeated last year, Republicans are trying a new strategy.
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The New Hampshire presidential primary is just over a month away, and lots of voters here are narrowing their choices in the Democratic or Republican nomination races. Some aren't thrilled with the prospect.
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The head of a state advisory board focused on quality of life for children, youth and families has resigned following an investigation by NHPR that revealed multiple accusations of child abuse against him.
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The state Supreme Court has ruled that internal police disciplinary files are subject to disclosure under New Hampshire’s public records law.
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Gary Hicks was appointed to the New Hampshire Supreme Court in 2006, making him the longest serving justice on the current court. That was until last week when Hicks turned 70, the mandatory retirement age for judges in the state.
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Details are still emerging following a shooting in November at New Hampshire Hospital. We discuss a patchwork of state and federal gun regulations, and the gunman's access to firearms after a history of criminal charges and serious mental health concerns.
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Every drug-related death is supposed to be investigated with an autopsy by the medical examiner’s office. But less than half of the people in New Hampshire who died of a suspected drug overdose received an autopsy this year.