Lebanon Democrat finds her footing in Concord
Published: 05-30-2025 5:02 PM
Modified: 06-02-2025 8:49 AM |
CONCORD — A common Statehouse joke is that the first thing a new New Hampshire governor needs to learn is how to count to three.
Just three votes on New Hampshire’s Executive Council can stymie a governor’s agenda.
“That’s a lot of power,” said Executive Councilor Joe Kenney, R-Wakefield.
Kenney should know. He has been on the five-member council since 2014 and represented a portion of the Upper Valley before new districts were drawn in 2022.
The council is an oddity almost entirely unique to New Hampshire. The five-member panel acts as a check on the governor’s authority and has veto power over her decisions, including the appointment of state officials. They also vote on all state expenditures and contracts over $10,000.
The group meets biweekly, and given the size and scope of modern state governments, their agenda packets are typically thousands of pages long.
Newly thrust into this seat of power is Executive Councilor Karen Liot Hill, D-Lebanon, who took office in January. She was elected to her first council term in November after serving for 20 years on Lebanon’s City Council and four terms as Grafton County treasurer.
She represents sprawling District 2, which stretches along the western side of the state from Littleton down to the Massachusetts line and encompasses all of the Upper Valley.
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Like her predecessor Cinde Warmington, Liot Hill is the sole Democratic member of the council, and is one of two new members this term along with John Stephen, R-Manchester, who represents District 4. Stephen, however, has held several roles with state agencies in Concord.
“I know I’m the new kid on the block,” Liot Hill said in an interview in her Concord office after one of her first meetings.
Liot Hill has long been an outspoken Democrat and she’s spent time advocating for progressive bills in the Statehouse and progressive values statewide outside of Executive Council chambers. But since January, she has found herself voting in unison with her Republican colleagues most of the time.
Liot Hill said this due in large part to the fact that much of the work of the Executive Council is nonpartisan. She also tried to weigh carefully when to go her own way.
Hopefully, she said, “if I do say no, it will mean something more.”
That advice came from Warmington, a former two-term District 2 executive councilor who launched an unsuccessful bid for governor last year.
Warmington spent time introducing Liot Hill to the role after the election and offering “advice on the things that aren’t written down anywhere,” she said.
“You have to know when to find common ground and when to stand your ground and that is what I told her: Know the difference,” Warmington said in a recent interview.
Still, Liot Hill has had several instances — including voting to help implement a support program for behavioral health in schools, supporting the Department of Corrections’ purchase of stun guns, and protesting the appointment of multiple members to the state Board of Education — where she was the lone voice of dissent.
In other cases, Liot Hill credits herself with making a difference. In February, the four Republican members of the council voted to put off the promotion of a transgender member of the state’s Air National Guard. Liot Hill was opposed to the delay.
At the next council meeting, Gov. Kelly Ayotte announced that the promotion would “remain tabled pending legal advice from the Attorney General per the breakfast meeting this morning.”
Attorney General John Formella delivered his legal opinion in a nonpublic session before the first council meeting in March, and the council ultimately approved the promotion unanimously.
Liot Hill said in an interview that she requested advice from Formella on the legality of tabling the promotion because of the candidate’s gender identity and believes the stand she took on the issue led to a just outcome for the service member.
Other times, the council’s size lends itself to close votes.
One issue where Liot Hill was part of a three-person majority was approving an $18 million contract to update the system New Hampshire uses to manage and organize data in the state’s child welfare program.
“Right now, the state is using a paper-based system from the early ’90s to take care of children, to track children who are being abused and severely neglected,” Liot Hill said of the need to upgrade.
The contract was approved last month on a 3-2 vote after being tabled at the previous meeting.
But the small majority cuts both ways.
At the May 21 council meeting, Liot Hill and Janet Stevens, R-Rye, were the only votes in favor of a $265,000 contract to conduct research into maternal health and postpartum services in the state.
At the meeting, Stephen, a former Health and Human Services commissioner, questioned the cost of the research and said he was concerned that it would increase insurance rates. The contract was voted down, 3 to 2, along gender lines.
In an interview, Liot Hill said the contract “had not stood out” from the many in the packet as being controversial, and in fact at the previous council meeting Ayotte had recognized Maternal Mental Health Awareness Week.
“When people who have given birth don’t receive the mental health support that they need it can mean that lives are lost, so it feels that the decisions we make are just really weighty,” Liot Hill said.
Kenney, who opposed the contract, anticipates that the state’s Department of Insurance “will come back with a good solution at some point and we’re working on it as we speak.”
“It wasn’t that the contract was no good,” he said in an interview. “It was the cost of the contract and we wanted to push back on it.”
In Kenney’s opinion, “90%” of the work is nonpartisan, he said in a recent interview. Instead, each councilor “brings their talents and insights to the council and I think that’s good.”
For Liot Hill, he said her experience in municipal government lends itself well to “topics that might be relatable to small cities and local communities.”
For her part, Warmington noted that while the vast majority of items are nonpartisan, “for those things that are controversial, it is critically, critically important that we have a voice representing the diverse interests in our state,” she said.
Both Kenney and Liot Hill said that while their work within the Executive Council Chambers in Concord is important, a major part of the job is attending events and meeting constituents across New Hampshire.
Kenney said the councilors often “need to be part civics teacher” to help educate constituents, many of whom do not understand the purpose of the Executive Council. Councilors, he said, can provide constituents with a conduit to top tiers of state government.
“Once (constituents) find out who I sit next to by law every week, which is the governor of New Hampshire, and I’ve got all the phone numbers of the commissioners, then I get repeat customers,” Kenney said.
Since January, Liot Hill has been out and about in the Upper Valley and beyond, attending political and leadership events, protesting the Trump administration, visiting infrastructure projects or state-funded programs and testifying in the Statehouse.
In one of her last City Council meetings in February, the group was struggling to move forward with a nearly 30-year project to acquire the Westboro Railyard property in West Lebanon. As part of the discussion, Liot Hill offered to use her new position to reach out to state leaders and help expedite the conversation.
“I’m fully in support of that,” then-Mayor Tim McNamara said at the meeting. “...I don’t want to go another two or three years and end up in the same place.”
To aid the situation, Liot Hill organized for Department of Transportation Commissioner William Cass and then-Deputy Commissioner Andre Briere to attend a Lebanon City Council meeting in March.
At the meeting the commissioners talked over the issue with City Councilors and answered their questions. They also agreed to write a memorandum of understanding to attempt to clarify some contract issues.
Liot Hill sees her job as split between technical duties and “constituent services.”
“I am an executive councilor, but I’m actually the top Democrat in state government,” Liot Hill said in an interview. “I feel a responsibility to try and communicate with my constituents and also to be a presence and to be a voice for Democratic values across the state.”
Liot Hill said she has no plans to run for governor or Congress at this point, though she joked that you can “never say never.”
Clare Shanahan can be reached at cshanahan@vnews.com.