HB1441
AN ACT establishing a commission to study the economic, legal, and sociological aspects of New Hampshire exerting its sovereign state rights.
Sponsored by Glenn Bailey
HB1441
AN ACT establishing a commission to study the economic, legal, and sociological aspects of New Hampshire exerting its sovereign state rights.
Sponsored by Glenn Bailey
yayyyyy , planning to call talk radio about this and message Glenn to thank him. Note that this is about independence not just nullification; the bill uses the term “independent New Hampshire.”
exactly
Hopefully he will keep us posted in ways we can help … otherwise I will email him every week to check.
another view:
“To Be Introduced 01/07/2026 …”
Is that the date for the committee hearing? I missed the last time such a bill
was in committee, but this time I will be on vacation Jan 1-9. I was originally
going to be in Ohio that week, but that is looking less and less likely.
Please keep us informed of details, especially concerning that committee.
NH House Bill 1441
Public Hearing: 01/23/2026 01:00 pm GP 228
https://gc.nh.gov/house/legislation/billinfo.aspx?id=1935&sy=
New Hampshire is set to take a significant step in the growing national conversation about state sovereignty. House Bill 1441, which would establish a commission to study the implications of New Hampshire exercising its sovereign rights—including the possibility of independence—is heading to a public hearing on Friday, January 23.
The bill calls for a temporary statutory commission to examine the economic, legal, and sociological implications of secession through November 2027. The study would address fiscal considerations, legal frameworks, social impacts, and security matters, providing New Hampshire residents with a comprehensive analysis of what independence could mean for the Granite State.
The NHEXIT movement, New Hampshire’s organized independence effort, is mobilizing supporters ahead of the hearing.
-How Texans Can Help-
While the hearing takes place over 1,800 miles from Texas, supporters of self-determination can still make their voices heard. Those unable to attend in person can contact New Hampshire legislators directly to express support for the bill’s passage.
The public hearing is scheduled for 1:00 PM on Friday, January 23 at Granite Place, 1 Granite Place, Concord, NH 03301. The venue is serving as a temporary location while the Legislative Office Building undergoes renovations.
-A Growing Movement-
New Hampshire’s effort represents another front in the broader conversation about state sovereignty and self-determination. As Texans continue working toward their own independence through democratic means, movements like NHEXIT demonstrate that the question of who governs is being asked in statehouses across America.
The Texas Nationalist Movement encourages supporters to stand in solidarity with independence advocates in New Hampshire by contacting legislators and, if possible, providing testimony in support of HB 1441.
We are looking for people to testify, fill the room, and hold signs outside the building.
2026 House Bill 1441
“AN ACT, establishing a commission to study the economic, legal, and sociological aspects of New Hampshire exerting its sovereign state rights.” Sponsored by Glenn Bailey
Has a public hearing in Committee on Friday January 23 1pm GP 228
1 Granite Place, Concord, NH 03301 https://maps.app.goo.gl/nggj4fargTXxyw5w5
https://gc.nh.gov/house/legislation/billinfo.aspx?id=1935&sy=
https://gc.nh.gov/bill_Status/billinfo.aspx?id=1935&version-id=23440
Our Political Director wants to fly out to New Hampshire and speak in support of the resolution. Could he participate in public hearing
We would fly him out there
Political Director JJ Aimes
Former FEMA speech writer
He teaches political science and federal government at the University level
Has worked on 67 campaigns
He has worked in DC for 4 decades
Hard core supporter of CALEXIT
Carla Gericke
TESTIMONY FOR HB 1441:
Chairperson, honorable members of the committee, thank you for the opportunity to testify today in strong support of HB 1441.
My name is Carla Gericke. I am a longtime leader in the Free State movement, president of the Foundation for New Hampshire Independence—a federally recognized 501(c)(3) focused on public education—and a key organizer with NHExit, a decentralized grassroots effort advancing peaceful, democratic exploration of New Hampshire’s sovereign options through civic engagement and legislative pathways.
Let me be very clear at the outset: HB 1441 is not about secession.
It is about preparedness.
And preparedness is not radical — it’s responsible.
Studying an option is not the same as choosing it. But refusing to study it is choosing ignorance.
Through the Free State Project and related efforts, thousands of liberty-minded people have already relocated to New Hampshire, joining hundreds of thousands of Granite Staters who value local control, low taxes, and personal freedom. NHExit builds on that civic culture by encouraging peaceful dialogue, research, and democratic participation. This bill is not a break from who we are — it is an extension of New Hampshire’s “Live Free or Die” tradition.
That tradition is embedded in our constitution. Articles 7 and 10 affirm that government exists to serve the people, and that the people retain the right to alter or reform it when it no longer does. HB 1441 honors that principle by proposing study — not action — and information before ideology.
We’ve been here before.
In 2022, CACR 32 proposed an immediate declaration of independence and was rejected as too abrupt.
In 2024, CACR 20 proposed conditional independence tied to federal debt levels and also failed.
Those measures asked for a decision.
HB 1441 asks for understanding.
As my grandmother used to say: Proper preparation prevents poor performance. It’s better to have a plan and not need it than to need one and not have it.
This commission would bring together legislators, public members, and experts to examine real-world questions: fiscal impacts, currency, interstate commerce, law enforcement, health care, energy, defense, federal entitlements, citizenship, and immigration. The goal is not to advocate an outcome — it’s to understand consequences.
In other words, HB 1441 does what responsible governments do: it stress-tests reality before ideology.
Peaceful independence is not theoretical. It has happened. Czechoslovakia separated peacefully. Singapore separated and prospered. Greenland is currently studying greater sovereignty through democratic inquiry. The common thread is preparation first, decision later.
Let me offer one concrete modern comparison: Estonia. Estonia has a population of about 1.3 million people—very close to New Hampshire’s—and regained independence from the Soviet Union in 1991. It faced exactly the questions this commission would study: how to create a currency, restructure health care and entitlements, establish independent courts and law enforcement, manage citizenship and immigration, defend itself geopolitically, and transition from a centralized command economy to a free-market one.
Through deliberate planning, commissions, and legal reform, Estonia emerged from economic collapse and political repression to become one of the most digitally advanced and economically free countries in the world, with low public debt and high trust in institutions. And here’s the key point: Estonia had to build sovereignty from the ashes. New Hampshire would be building it from strength. Our per-capita GDP is more than double Estonia’s, we sit next to major markets, and we already operate under a low-tax, high-freedom model. If Estonia could succeed under far harsher conditions, it is entirely reasonable to study what sovereignty could look like for New Hampshire—carefully, responsibly, and with eyes wide open.
Decentralization itself is a global trend. Two hundred years ago, there were about 50 sovereign states. Today, there are nearly 200. Smaller, more cohesive polities often govern more effectively because decisions are made closer to the people affected by them.
New Hampshire has always led. We adopted the first independent constitution in 1776. We resisted unjust rule in the Pine Tree Riot. We hold the First-in-the-Nation primary. And through the Free State Project, we’ve become the world’s first intentional community dedicated to peaceful civic concentration around liberty and self-ownership.
That culture produces results. New Hampshire ranks #1 in economic freedom nationally. We have no broad-based income or sales tax, high household incomes, and strong civic participation. If sovereignty were ever chosen, we would be starting from strength — not desperation.
Which brings me to the federal reality driving this discussion. As of this year, U.S. national debt stands at roughly $38.5 trillion, growing by billions per day. Interest costs alone are approaching $1.2 trillion annually. New Hampshire taxpayers are fiscally responsible — yet we’re locked into underwriting a system that is not.
HB 1441 does not launch a lifeboat.
It simply asks whether one could be built.
If we were designing a new society today — on Mars, for example — we would not burden it with unsustainable debt, endless regulation, or perpetual conflict. We would design for efficiency, liberty, and sustainability.
HB 1441 asks us to think like founders again — not rebels, not dreamers, but builders.
In a polarized era, refusing to plan is the real risk. Studying peaceful, democratic options is not division — it is stewardship.
I urge you to pass HB 1441 and allow New Hampshire to lead responsibly once again.
Thank you, and I’m happy to answer any questions.
Carla Gericke answers questions on inflation and HB1441
https://x.com/nhexitnow/status/2014842975290065209