Every Friday, the Morning Edition team at NHPR brings you the top headlines from the week in local New Hampshire news. You'll get the scoop on the biggest stories you might have missed from reporters around the Granite State, including NHPR's newsroom.
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As the leaves change, presidential candidates are seen across the Granite State. But how real is the New Hampshire Primary these days?
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Democrat Hal Rafter’s victory in Northwood this week means the Republicans’ majority in the House is down to just one seat.
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The attorney general and secretary of state say former President Donald Trump is eligible to run as a candidate in New Hampshire’s presidential primary- despite his involvement in the events leading to the January 6th insurrection. Also, the state board of education considers whether to allow a conservative media group to provide online classes to New Hampshire high schoolers.
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New Hampshire faces a court-imposed deadline to eliminate waitlists for in-patient mental health care by next May. This week, state officials announced more details about how they plan to do that.
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Legal scholars are debating whether the 14th amendment could disqualify former President Donald Trump from appearing on the presidential primary ballot in New Hampshire. The state Attorney General and Secretary of State haven’t taken a position.
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Manufacturing company Saint-Gobain is closing its plant in Merrimack. That facility has been at the center of a long-running controversy over PFAS contamination in the area.
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Some federal funding for substance use disorder services will end in the next year or two in New Hampshire. How could this affect systems of care the state has built over time?
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The Board of Education tabled a contract on Thursday with far-right nonprofit PragerU after hearing public testimony.
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Trump is the frontrunner in the Republican presidential primary here in New Hampshire.
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A new study shows one in three New Hampshire adults say they’re struggling to pay for basic household expenses.