**More than 3,500 Granite Staters participated in today’s town hall**
Washington, D.C. – Today, Representative Maggie Goodlander hosted a telephone town hall with more than 3,500 people from across New Hampshire to share an update on her first 35 days in Congress and answer questions from constituents, including questions about the impact of President Trump’s executive actions on New Hampshire, protecting federal workers, and her work to deliver for the Granite State in the People’s House.
“Over the past two weeks, I have heard from thousands of our fellow citizens who are feeling a lot of pain and a lot of uncertainty right now because of the actions of the Trump Administration,” said Representative Goodlander. “From a freeze on federal funding to a proposal for tariffs that may well start a trade war to executive actions that threaten to upend our rule of law, I want the people of New Hampshire to know that my team hears you, we support you, and we are fighting for you every single day in the People’s House.”
Representative Goodlander was joined by Nashua Mayor Jim Donchess, Concord Mayor Byron Champlin, Claremont Mayor Dale Girard, Berlin Mayor Robert Cone, and Franklin Mayor Desiree McLaughlin on today’s call. Goodlander has already begun working on key priorities for New Hampshire, including to lower costs, deliver for our service members, support small businesses, and protect our fundamental freedoms. Granite Staters living in New Hampshire’s Second District can contact Representative Goodlander’s office by calling 603-226-1002 or visiting Goodlander.House.Gov.
Representative Goodlander has dedicated her life to serving New Hampshire and our country and is fighting every day to ensure every Granite Stater gets a fair deal. Before taking the oath of office to represent the Second District in the People’s House, she served as an intelligence officer in the United States Navy Reserve, a law clerk on the U.S. Supreme Court for Justice Stephen Breyer, Deputy Assistant Attorney General in the U.S. Department of Justice, and as a professor of constitutional law at UNH Law School and Dartmouth.
You can watch a recording of the town hall HERE.