When first we wrote about the latest out-of-state student (Miles Brown) running to deny an NH resident a seat in the State Legislature, I predicted something that has come true.
“These screengrabs might be scrubbed before the end of the day.”
It may have been more than one day after our reporting, but Miles has scrubbed his social media of any obvious evidence that he lives in West Hartford, Connecticut. Here’s what his Facebook page looked like before he scrubbed it.
And here is what it looks like now.
The page has become all about his campaign…to pretend he doesn’t still live in West Hartford, Connecticut. And he might pull it off. But I have a suggestion that might help the deception, Miles.
Related: Dem Kathleen Calavaro Encourages Massachusetts Residents to Vote for Her in NH
Read carefully.
You are still listed as an active registered voter from West Hartford, Connecticut. You must notify CT that you are no longer a “resident” of that state and have your name removed from the voter rolls.
You are (after all) running as an NH resident for a seat in the NH Legislature.
And if you have not surrendered your CT state-issued ID or driver’s license (Name, DOB, Address – not in NH) for the comparable NH version, then you’re going to keep running into a brick wall on the student voting rights issue.
Miles Brown, Jessi Yu, Sophia Bokaie, and even Nicolas Marci, who I am told is a Texas resident running for the NH House (not yet confirmed), have more voting rights than any actual New Hampshire Student.
While they and all the other out-of-state students like them can vote absentee or in person in two states, New Hampshire students and every other actual resident of the Granite State can only vote here.
These “students”can vote here or there in the primary or here or there in the general. Vote in one local race or another. As long as it’s not the same election (no voting in two states on November 8th, for example), they probably won’t get arrested for it.
Choose whose taxes to raise, which budgets to grow, and what ballot initiatives to support in either of the two states.
Those are the voting rights for which you fight. You want special “rights.” Extra rights. More rights than the rest of us. The right to do what we, as actual NH residents, cannot.
Is it just me, or is that one of the most “Democrat things” you can imagine after supporting and defending elected officials who are spending trillions of dollars not yet earned by “students” not yet born who had no voice or vote for the Democrats spending it?



