A quiet day in Concord, with just two bills referred to interim study in the Senate. No new laws were signed, no bills introduced, and no floor votes recorded.
Killed
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HB1124 — Would have established a “right to compute” in NH law, protecting individuals’ ability to run software and perform computations on their own devices without government interference. Supporters cited implications for cryptocurrency use and AI development. The Senate sent it to interim study rather than advancing it to a floor vote.
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HB1665 — Would have addressed the rules governing subpoena issuance in administrative proceedings, affecting how state agencies investigate and enforce regulations. Also referred to interim study.
Both bills originated in the House, where they passed before stalling in the Senate. Interim study means a bill is effectively shelved for the session but can be revisited in future years.
To see how your representatives voted, visit nhpolitics.org/find-your-rep.