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4 dead as severe storms hit Houston, TX; Election Protection Program eases access to voting information; surge in solar installations eases energy costs for Missourians; IN makes a splash for Safe Boating Week.

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The Supreme Court rules funding for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is okay, election deniers hold key voting oversight positions in swing states, and North Carolina lawmakers vote to ban people from wearing masks in public.

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Americans are buying up rubber ducks ahead of Memorial Day, Nebraskans who want residential solar have a new lifeline, seven community colleges are working to provide students with a better experience, and Mississippi's "Big Muddy" gets restoration help.

Election Over: No Break for Granite State Headed to 2016

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Wednesday, November 5, 2014   

CONCORD, N.H. - After enduring months of campaign ads, Granite Staters are waking up today and learning how the candidates and issues they favored in this midterm fared. But today barely marks a break in the action for political insiders, as they start ramping up for the 2016 presidential election. That's according to Jill Hanauer, president and CEO of Project New America.

"We're waking up today and wanting to take a nice sigh of relief that it's over, but it's not over," she says. Politics just started for 2016, the minute the sun rose."

According to the Center for Responsive Politics, outside groups outspent the candidates in the hotly contested race for U.S. Senate. The group says outside groups spent more than $30 million while the combined spending for Republican candidate Scott Brown and incumbent Democrat Jeanne Shaheen was slightly more than $20 million.

Hanauer says as a candidate, former Senator Brown ran as a moderate in this election, but she says, looking ahead to 2016, don't expect to see many moderate Republicans flocking to New Hampshire.

"You're going to see Republican presidential candidates running towards the base of the Republican Party of New Hampshire when they start visiting that state, probably beginning tomorrow," she says. "That base is extremely conservative and extremely still very Tea Party."

Hanauer believes both parties may change tactics for 2016. She says while traditional media was popular in this midterm, campaigns may reduce their reliance on television ads, since many younger voters get their entertainment from Internet subscription services such as Netflix.


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