Laurie Sanborn

American politician
Laurie Sanborn
Speaker pro tempore of the New Hampshire House of Representatives
Incumbent
Assumed office
December 7, 2022
Preceded byKimberly Rice
Member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives
Incumbent
Assumed office
December 2012
ConstituencyHillsborough 41st
In office
December 2010 – June 5, 2012
ConstituencyMerrimack 5th
Personal details
BornNashua, New Hampshire, U.S.
Political partyRepublican
EducationSimmons University (BA)

Laurie Sanborn is an American politician in the state of New Hampshire. She is a member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives, sitting as a Republican from the Hillsborough 41 district, having been first elected in 2012. Sanborn has been a Deputy Majority Leader since December 2, 2020. Sanborn served in the House previously, representing Merrimack 5 from 2010 until her resignation on June 5, 2012.[1][2][3][4]

Controversy

In 2023, Sanborn resigned as chairwoman of the Commission to Study the Effect of Recent Changes Made to the Charitable Gaming Laws. This happened after she was named in an investigation of her husband, former State Senator Andy Sanborn, and his alleged illegal use of $844,000 in pandemic assistance.[5]

References

  1. ^ Laurie Sanborn ballotpedia.
  2. ^ NH General Court member profile.
  3. ^ Laurie Sanborn Trackbill.
  4. ^ WMUR on Laurie Sanborn.
  5. ^ Timmins, Annmarie (2023-09-01). "Laurie Sanborn no longer heads House casino study commission". New Hampshire Bulletin. Retrieved 2023-12-15.
New Hampshire House of Representatives
Preceded by
Kimberly Rice
Speaker pro tempore of the New Hampshire House of Representatives
2022–present
Incumbent
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Statewide political officials of New Hampshire
U.S. senators
State government
Senate
House
Supreme Court
(appointed)
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Ledbetter (R), Pringle (R)
Tilton (R/C)
Toma (R), Grantham (R)
Shepherd (R), Eubanks (R)
Rivas (D), Wood (D)
McCluskie (D), Kennedy (D)
Ritter (D), Godfrey (D)
Longhurst (D)
Renner (R), Clemons (R)
Burns (R), Jones (R)
Saiki (D)
Moyle (R)
Welch (D), Gordon-Booth (D)
Huston (R), Karickhoff (R)
Grassley (R), Wills (R)
Hawkins (R), Carpenter (R)
Osborne (R), Meade (R)
DeVillier (R), Johnson (R)
Jones (D), Stein (D)
Mariano (D), Hogan (D)
Tate (D), Pohutsky (D)
Hortman (DFL), Wolgamott (DFL)
White (R), Barton (R)
Plocher (R), Henderson (R)
Regier (R), Knudsen (R)
Kelly (R), Arch (R)*
Yeager (D), Monroe-Moreno (D)
Packard (R), Sanborn (R)
Coughlin (D), Wimberly (D)
Martínez (D)
Heastie (D), Aubry (D)
Moore (R), Stevens (R)
Johnson (R)
Stephens (R), Oelslager (R)
McCall (R), Hilbert (R)
Fahey (D), Holvey (D)
McClinton (D)
Shekarchi (D), Kennedy (D)
Smith (R), Pope (R)
Bartels (R), Stevens (R)
Sexton (R), Marsh (R)
Phelan (R), Geren (R)
Schultz (R), Dunnigan (R)
Krowinski (D)
Scott (D)
Jinkins (D), Orwall (D)
Hanshaw (R), Espinosa (R)
Vos (R), Petersen (R)
Sommers (R), Stith (R)
Federal districts:
Mendelson (D)*
Territories:
Ale (R)
Terlaje (D)*
Villagomez (I)
Hernández (PPD/D), Varela (PPD/D)
Francis (D)*
Italics indicate speakers pro tempore
*Unicameral body
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168th General Court (2023–present)
Speaker of the House
Sherman Packard (R)
Deputy Speaker
Steven D. Smith (R)
Speaker pro tempore
Laurie Sanborn (R)
Majority Leader
Jason Osborne (R)
Minority Leader
Matthew Wilhelm (D)


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