Will New Hampshire Finally ‘Live Free’?
As one of just nine states without a personal income tax, and as a state with a long entrepreneurial tradition, New Hampshire might well be expected to have above-average job growth.
As one of just nine states without a personal income tax, and as a state with a long entrepreneurial tradition, New Hampshire might well be expected to have above-average job growth.
S.B. 61, the New Hampshire Right to Work Bill, would free the individual employee to combat union boss mismanagement and corruption by wielding the power of the purse string.
A solid majority of Americans across the country and in New Hampshire support Right to Work because it protects workers’ freedom and leads to a more prosperous economy for all.
Unfortunately, employees who labor in non-Right to Work states like New Hampshire can be fired and/or denied future job opportunities simply because they refuse to continue putting money in the pockets of union bosses like Doug McCarron and Frank Spencer.
It defies common sense to claim that people who get the vast majority of their income from their jobs would lopsidedly favor living in states where they are worse off over states where they are better off.
Go here to read the March 2017 National Right to Work Newsletter.
Based on his April 12th press release remarking about New Hampshire’s March unemployment rate, Governor John Lynch has certainly been ignoring New Hampshire’s January “15-year High Unemployment” rate of “5.1%” (see WMUR link) and March’s 5.2% rate : “We continue…