Economic Justice for Low Income

and working Class Families

The Problem

The economy isn’t growing and prices are growing with it. Too many families in Ward 9 are working full time, doing everything right, and still falling behind. Too many seniors are watching fixed incomes get smaller in real terms every year. Too many young people can't imagine affording a home in the community where they grew up. Economic justice isn't a radical idea. It's the belief that if you work hard and play by the rules, you should be able to pay your bills, stay in your home, and build something for your family.

What I’ll Fight For

I've been there. I know what it feels like to need help and not know where to turn. I know what public assistance actually looks like from the inside, the paperwork, the waiting, the uncertainty. And I know that the people who need the most help are often the ones with the least time and energy to fight for it.

  • Economic policies that center working families, not just business interests

  • Strengthening the social safety net so that a single bad month doesn't mean losing everything

  • Fighting against policies that make it harder for low-income families to access housing, healthcare, childcare, or food assistance

  • Supporting workforce development programs that give people real pathways to better-paying jobs

  • Ensuring that Ward 9's most vulnerable residents — seniors, people with disabilities, single parents, and low-income families — have a voice at the State House

Economic justice means building a New Hampshire where opportunity isn't just for the people who already have everything. It means making sure that the people doing the hard work of keeping this community going can actually afford to live in it.