How to ID Candidates Who support the Free state’s Liberty Alliance Agenda

Do they want to:

  • DEFUND, CLOSE, OR TOTALLY DEREGULATE what they’re elected to run. For instance, a zoning board candidate who wants all zoning regulations repealed.
  • BAR PUBLIC OFFICIALS & PUBLICALLY FUNDED NON-PROFITS FROM TESTIFYING on behalf of their constituents.
  • HARASS PUBLIC OFFICIALS & STAFF with excessive requirements for research, documentation, print-outs and other paperwork.
  • PRIVATIZE PUBLIC SERVICES in a way that excludes low-income residents.
  • HIDE FROM TAXPAYER SCRUTINY the use or outcomes from taxpayer spending, such as banning state audits of EFA vouchers.
  • OBSTRUCT ELECTIONS & VOTING by requiring hand counts, unusual documentation, in-person voting, and so on.

If you identify new candidates who meet these crtieria, please inform the voters in your region.

Goals of the Free State Project’s Liberty Alliance

The Liberty Alliance is the political arm of the Free State Project [FSP]. The FSP has attracted thousands of people to move to New Hampshire with a commitment to run for office. The FSP’s goal is to take over state government with a “liberty” agenda.A complete list of Liberty Alliance 2025 bill priorities are on page 16 of their ranking list; download here.

1. Seeks to cause Public Education to Collapse.

The Liberty Alliance has:

Claimed that public schools are failing while banning any effort to compare the results from voucher students

Ignored Supreme Court instructions to increase state funding

increased the likelihood that children in poorer districts will receive an inferior education

expanded the”Education Freedom Account” vouchers to any student, causing schools serving 80% of students to be underfunded.

encouraged public mistrust and harassed school districts with increased, uncompensated  paperwork and requirements.

2. Defund state government and download expenses onto towns

The Liberty Alliance has:

cut taxes on the wealthy and corporations to the point that NH will not be able to pay its bills. (Already achieved, see NH is in Trouble.)

hamstring the state’s ability to fund any of the deficits they’ve created. This bill, CACR 15, lost by only 2 votes.

stop the Municipal Association from lobbying for towns’ and cities’ best interests and other nonprofits from testifying in the interest of their constituents, HB1479.  (They tried again in 2025 and 2026.)

3. Deny Funding for Public Services

The Liberty Alliance:

Told legislators to vote against SNAP food benefits for needy children

Tried to close the State Library

Tried to to privatize profitable public recreation areas

Closed nursing homes, resulting in poor clients being forced to leave