U.S. midterm primary election season wraps up in New Hampshire on 
		Tuesday
		
		 
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		[September 13, 2022]  
		By Andy Sullivan 
		 
		WASHINGTON (Reuters) - New Hampshire 
		Republicans on Tuesday choose between a far-right candidate or a 
		longtime state legislator to face incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator 
		Maggie Hassan as the midterm primary season comes to a close. 
		 
		It is the last in a series of nominating contests that have seen 
		Republicans repeatedly select candidates aligned with former President 
		Donald Trump, causing some in the party to worry this hurts their 
		chances of winning control of the U.S. Senate in the Nov. 8 midterm 
		elections. 
		 
		Taking back either the Senate or the House of Representatives would give 
		Republicans the power to bring Democratic President Joe Biden's 
		legislative agenda to a halt and launch potentially politically damaging 
		probes. 
		 
		The leading New Hampshire candidate, retired Army Brigadier General Don 
		Bolduc, has echoed Trump's false claims about 2020 election fraud and 
		questioned whether the Federal Bureau of Investigation should be 
		abolished following its August search of Trump's Florida estate, where 
		agents found a cache of classified documents. He has courted Trump, but 
		Trump has not endorsed him. 
		 
		Bolduc faces state Senate President Chuck Morse, a lower-key figure who 
		is backed by White Mountain PAC, a national Republican group that has 
		spent at least $4.6 million on his behalf. Several other candidates have 
		failed to gain widespread support. 
		 
		Morse would stand a better chance of defeating Hassan than Bolduc 
		because he can appeal to independents who account for the majority of 
		voters in the state, said Dartmouth College political science professor 
		Linda Fowler.  
		 
		"If Bolduc gets the nomination, the independents will go to Hassan," she 
		said. "If he doesn't get the nomination, the independents will have a 
		serious choice. 
		 
		The state's Republican Governor Chris Sununu endorsed Morse on Thursday, 
		saying he would be the most competitive candidate against Hassan. Sununu 
		has called Bolduc a "conspiracy theorist," while Bolduc has called 
		Sununu a "communist Chinese sympathizer." 
		 
		Sununu's decision last fall not to take on Hassan himself disappointed 
		national Republicans, who believed the governor, a member of a 
		well-known New Hampshire political family, would have easily unseated 
		Hassan. 
		 
		That, along with the nomination of political novices including former 
		football star Herschel Walker in Georgia and celebrity doctor Mehmet Oz 
		in Pennsylvania, have dimmed Republicans' chances of winning Senate 
		control. They are still favored to take a majority in the House of 
		Representatives. 
		 
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            A sign reminds citizens to vote in the 
			upcoming New Hampshire Primary Election in Londonderry, New 
			Hampshire, U.S., September 8, 2022. REUTERS/Brian Snyder 
            
			
			 
            CONTROL OF SENATE  
			 
			Top Senate Republican Mitch McConnell has put his party's chances of 
			winning that chamber at "50-50" in public remarks, noting concerns 
			about "candidate quality" without singling out any specific 
			candidates. 
			 
			Nonpartisan analysts say Hassan holds the advantage over whoever 
			wins the Republican nomination. But the Senate Leadership Fund, a 
			national group affiliated with McConnell, has said it plans to spend 
			$23 million on attack ads to help the Republican nominee. 
			 
			New Hampshire is one of seven key battlegrounds along with Georgia, 
			Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Wisconsin, Arizona and Nevada that 
			analysts believe will determine control of the 100-seat Senate. 
			 
			The chamber is currently divided 50-50, with Democrats holding a 
			majority thanks to Vice President Kamala Harris' tie-breaking vote. 
			 
			Along with the Senate contest, Republican voters in New Hampshire 
			will pick candidates to take on the state's two incumbent House 
			Democrats. 
			 
			Republicans need to pick up only four seats to win control of the 
			435-seat House, and both of New Hampshire's seats are likely to be 
			competitive in November. 
			 
			Two former Trump administration officials, Matt Mowers and Karoline 
			Leavitt, are among the Republicans hoping to take on incumbent 
			Democratic Representative Chris Pappas in a district that covers the 
			eastern half of the state. 
			 
			In the other district, Keene Mayor George Hansel and former 
			Hillsborough County official Bob Burns are among those vying to face 
			Democratic Representative Ann McLane Kuster. 
			 
			In Rhode Island, an open House seat is raising the possibility that 
			Republicans could gain a foothold in a region where they have 
			struggled to compete. Centrist Republican Allan Fung is unopposed in 
			his primary, while state treasurer Seth Magaziner and former Biden 
			administration official Sarah Morgenthau are among those competing 
			for the Democratic nomination. 
			 
			Voters will also go to the polls in Delaware, though the November 
			election for its single House seat is not expected to be 
			competitive. 
			 
			(Reporting by Andy Sullivan; Editing by Scott Malone and Cynthia 
			Osterman) 
            
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