Ann McLane Kuster was the Democratic nominee for Congress in the Second Congressional District of New Hampshire, narrowly losing by just 3,551 votes in 2010.
Kuster, an attorney, has not held elected office, but her parents did. Her mother, Susan McLane was a State Senator, and her father Malcolm served as Mayor of Concord, on the Executive Council, and ran for Governor as an Independent in 1972.
Kuster, of Hopkingtom, graduated from Dartmouth College in 1978, in the third class with women, and received her law degree from Georgetown University Law Center in 1984.
Ann McLane KusterFor 22 percent of N.H. Meals on Wheels recipients, the delivery driver is "the only human contact in their life from week to week."
Says the Security Against Foreign Enemies Act of 2015 would not "pause" the resettlement of Syrian refugees in the United States.
Says she has opposed measures to weaken the Dodd-Frank Wall Street regulatory bill and campaign-finance legislation when they were offered as stand-alone bills.
On delaying a health care mandate on business.
Says she is "entering in the most diverse class ever," of U.S. Representatives
Says U.S. Rep. Charles Bass wants to privatize Social Security.
Says Rep. Charlie Bass, R-NH voted to "raise his own pay" eight times
Says Charlie Bass forfeits right to equal cost for TV ads under FCC rules
Says Rep. Charles Bass "supports privatizing Social Security, risking trillions more on Wall Street."