New Hampshire State Constitution: Framework and History
The New Hampshire State Constitution is the foundational legal document governing the structure, powers, and limitations of state government. It predates the United States Constitution, making New Hampshire's charter one of the oldest continuously operative state constitutions in the nation. This page covers the document's structural framework, historical development, amendment mechanics, and relationship to federal and local authority.
- Definition and scope
- Core mechanics or structure
- Causal relationships or drivers
- Classification boundaries
- Tradeoffs and tensions
- Common misconceptions
- Constitutional provisions checklist
- Reference table or matrix
Definition and scope
The New Hampshire Constitution is the supreme law of the state, superseding all statutes, regulations, and municipal ordinances that conflict with its provisions. It was adopted on June 2, 1784, making it the second-oldest state constitution still in effect in the United States, after the Massachusetts Constitution of 1780. The document is organized into two parts: Part First, the Bill of Rights, and Part Second, the Form of Government (New Hampshire Secretary of State, NH Constitution).
Part First contains 38 articles establishing individual rights, including protections for freedom of speech, the right to bear arms, due process, and the prohibition against unreasonable searches. Part Second defines the structure of all three branches of state government, prescribes electoral processes, and sets qualifications for office. Together, these two parts constitute the complete constitutional text as periodically amended.
Scope and coverage: This page addresses the New Hampshire State Constitution exclusively. Federal constitutional provisions, U.S. Supreme Court jurisprudence on federal questions, and the constitutions of other states are not covered here. Municipal charters and county ordinances derive authority from the state constitution but are not themselves constitutional documents — they fall outside the scope of this reference. For context on how the constitution interacts with local governance structures, see New Hampshire Government in Local Context.
Core mechanics or structure
Part First: Bill of Rights
The 38 articles in Part First establish affirmative rights and prohibitions binding on state government. Article 1 declares that all persons are born equally free and independent. Article 2-a, added by constitutional amendment in 1982, specifically recognizes the right of the people to keep and bear arms. Article 15 addresses criminal procedure rights, including the right against self-incrimination.
Part Second: Form of Government
Part Second establishes and regulates the three branches of state government:
Legislative Branch: The New Hampshire General Court consists of the Senate (24 members) and the House of Representatives (400 members). The House of Representatives is the largest state legislative body in the United States. Article 9 of Part Second requires that representatives be elected biennially. The constitution sets the minimum age for senators at 30 years and for representatives at 18 years.
Executive Branch: Article 41 vests executive power in a Governor, elected to a 2-year term. New Hampshire is one of only two states still electing its governor to a 2-year term (Vermont being the other). The constitution also establishes the Executive Council, a 5-member body with authority to confirm gubernatorial appointments and approve state contracts. This council structure is unique in the nation. Details on executive operations appear under New Hampshire Executive Branch.
Judicial Branch: Article 73 establishes a unified judicial system. The New Hampshire Supreme Court has 5 justices, including the Chief Justice. Justices are appointed by the Governor with Executive Council confirmation and serve until age 70.
Amendment Mechanism
Amendments to the constitution require approval by three-fifths of both legislative chambers to be placed on the ballot, followed by two-thirds approval from voters in a statewide referendum. Constitutional conventions may also be called; voters are asked every 10 years whether to convene one (NH Secretary of State, Constitutional Conventions).
Causal relationships or drivers
The constitution's distinctive features reflect specific historical pressures. The document was drafted in 1783–1784 as New Hampshire sought a stable post-revolutionary governance framework. The creation of the Executive Council was a direct response to colonial-era grievances against unchecked royal gubernatorial power; distributing executive authority across 5 elected councillors was an intentional structural constraint.
The large House of Representatives — 400 members — stems from a constitutional commitment to proportional representation at the town level, rooted in the town meeting tradition embedded in New Hampshire civic culture. See New Hampshire Town Meeting Government for the local governance context.
The 10-year periodic convention question is a mechanism designed to prevent constitutional calcification. It reflects the founders' view, articulated in Article 38 of Part Second, that the people retain the right to reform government when necessary.
The prohibition on broad-based income and sales taxes, while not explicitly stated in the constitution itself, has been interpreted by the New Hampshire Supreme Court through decades of jurisprudence as consistent with constitutional limitations on state taxation authority — a structural factor that shapes the New Hampshire taxation system to this day.
Classification boundaries
The New Hampshire Constitution operates within a defined jurisdictional hierarchy:
- Superseded by: The U.S. Constitution and federal law under the Supremacy Clause (Article VI of the U.S. Constitution).
- Supersedes: All New Hampshire statutes, administrative rules, municipal ordinances, and county regulations.
- Concurrent with: Federal Bill of Rights provisions, though New Hampshire's Part First may in some instances provide broader protections than federal minimums.
Constitutional provisions are distinguished from statutory law (enacted by the General Court), administrative rules (promulgated by executive agencies under RSA authority), and municipal charters (adopted under RSA 49-B). A statutory change requires only a majority legislative vote; a constitutional amendment requires the supermajority process described above.
The constitution does not govern private legal relationships directly — it constrains state action. Private parties are not bound by constitutional provisions except where the state has delegated authority or where judicial interpretation extends a constitutional norm through statute.
Tradeoffs and tensions
Stability versus adaptability: The supermajority amendment threshold creates constitutional durability but can prevent timely adaptation. Between 1784 and 2024, the constitution has been amended approximately 145 times, a comparatively high number that reflects the difficulty of major structural revision and the tendency to address specific issues incrementally.
Executive Council as check versus bottleneck: The 5-member Executive Council provides a democratic check on gubernatorial authority but has been criticized as an obstacle to efficient administration. Confirmation delays for judicial and executive appointments have periodically created operational gaps in state government.
Large House and representation: The 400-member House ensures granular local representation but creates logistical challenges for floor management, committee assignments, and achieving quorum. Per-member compensation is constitutionally set at $100 per two-year term (NH Constitution, Part Second, Article 15), making New Hampshire's legislature the lowest-compensated in the nation — a feature that structurally favors representatives with independent income or retirement.
Religious test vestige: Article 6 of Part First, as historically interpreted, contained language regarding Protestant Christianity that was the subject of litigation. The New Hampshire Supreme Court ruled such provisions unenforceable under federal constitutional standards, creating a formal discrepancy between constitutional text and operative law.
Common misconceptions
Misconception: The New Hampshire Constitution is subordinate to state statutes.
The reverse is true. The constitution is the supreme state law. Statutes that conflict with constitutional provisions are void. The New Hampshire Supreme Court exercises judicial review to invalidate inconsistent legislation.
Misconception: The Governor of New Hampshire holds equivalent executive authority to governors of other states.
The Executive Council materially constrains gubernatorial authority. The Governor cannot unilaterally confirm judicial appointments, approve major contracts, or authorize certain expenditures without affirmative Executive Council votes. This is a structural distinction from 49 other states.
Misconception: A simple legislative majority can amend the constitution.
Constitutional amendments require a three-fifths supermajority in both chambers to be placed on a ballot, then two-thirds voter approval. A simple majority cannot amend the constitution through the standard legislative process.
Misconception: The constitution was adopted simultaneously with U.S. independence.
New Hampshire's constitution was adopted June 2, 1784 — eight years after the Declaration of Independence and five years before the U.S. Constitution took effect. It replaced an earlier temporary frame of government adopted in January 1776.
Misconception: The 10-year convention question automatically triggers a constitutional convention.
A majority vote in favor of a convention question triggers the convening of a convention, but a convention can only propose amendments — it cannot unilaterally rewrite or replace the constitution without subsequent voter ratification of each proposed change.
Constitutional provisions checklist
The following identifies the principal structural elements established or governed by the New Hampshire Constitution:
- [ ] Part First, 38 articles — individual rights and liberties
- [ ] Part Second, Form of Government — legislative, executive, judicial structure
- [ ] General Court composition — 24 Senate seats, 400 House seats
- [ ] Governor qualification — resident of New Hampshire for 7 years, U.S. citizen for 7 years
- [ ] Executive Council — 5 members elected from 5 districts
- [ ] Supreme Court — 5 justices, mandatory retirement at age 70
- [ ] Amendment process — three-fifths legislative supermajority + two-thirds voter ratification
- [ ] Periodic convention question — placed on ballot every 10 years
- [ ] Gubernatorial term — 2 years, no term limit specified in constitution
- [ ] Senate term — 2 years
- [ ] House term — 2 years
- [ ] Representative compensation — $100 per two-year term (constitutionally fixed)
- [ ] Judicial appointment — Governor nominates, Executive Council confirms
For the full text of the constitution, see New Hampshire Secretary of State — NH Constitution.
The broader government landscape, including how constitutional structures interact with agency operations, is accessible through the New Hampshire Government Authority index.
Reference table or matrix
| Constitutional Feature | New Hampshire | Comparative Note |
|---|---|---|
| Constitution adopted | June 2, 1784 | 2nd oldest operative state constitution in U.S. |
| Total amendments (through 2024) | ~145 | High volume; reflects incremental amendment strategy |
| House of Representatives seats | 400 | Largest state legislative body in the United States |
| Senate seats | 24 | Standard bicameral structure |
| Governor term length | 2 years | One of only 2 states with 2-year governor term |
| Executive Council members | 5 | Unique to New Hampshire among all 50 states |
| Supreme Court justices | 5 | Mandatory retirement age: 70 |
| Amendment threshold (legislature) | 3/5 supermajority | Both chambers required |
| Amendment threshold (voters) | 2/3 supermajority | Statewide referendum |
| Periodic convention question | Every 10 years | Mandated by Article 38, Part Second |
| Representative compensation | $100/two-year term | Lowest legislative compensation in the nation |
| Bill of Rights articles | 38 | Part First |
References
- New Hampshire Secretary of State — New Hampshire Constitution (full text)
- New Hampshire General Court — Official Legislative Website
- New Hampshire Judicial Branch — Court System Overview
- New Hampshire Office of the Governor
- New Hampshire Executive Council
- New Hampshire Office of Legislative Services — RSA and Constitution Resources
- National Conference of State Legislatures — State Constitutions