



Primary Election
Party selects its nominee.
Current roleState Senator
PartyRepublican
Political ideologyConservative Republican
Age63 years old (Apr 7, 1963)
GenderMale
LocationNew Hampshire
BackgroundAcademic (marketing/hospitality professor; business school administrator)
EducationBS, Ohio University (1985)
Notable personal detailsDaniel Eugene Innis is an American academic, farmer, and Republican politician in New Hampshire. He has served in the New Hampshire Senate and represents District 7 (R-Bradford), with committee roles including vice chair assignments in finance and housing-related subcommittees. Innis previously worked in higher education leadership at the University of New Hampshire and has been involved in small business and farming at Trails End Farm in Bradford.
Supports lowering taxes and opposes instituting an income or sales tax in New Hampshire; favors reducing business taxes (business profits tax and business enterprise tax) and keeping overall taxes low. Has proposed budget and tax-code reforms intended to simplify the code and broaden the base while pursuing tax reductions to support small businesses and economic growth.
Dan Innis has expressed opposition to New Hampshire’s Medicaid expansion in past surveys but has also voted in the New Hampshire Senate to continue and reauthorize the state’s expanded Medicaid program. His record includes votes both against and later in favor of measures that keep or make permanent expanded Medicaid, indicating inconsistent or evolving positions on healthcare expansion.
Supports stronger border enforcement and restrictions on illegal immigration, opposes sanctuary city policies and pathways to citizenship, and frames immigration as connected to crime and fentanyl trafficking. Favors law-and-order approaches rather than expanded legal pathways or broad regularization for undocumented immigrants.
Dan Innis has a record of opposing efforts to enshrine broad constitutional abortion rights in New Hampshire and has supported limits on abortion (including past support for a 20-week ban and saying he backs the state’s law prohibiting elective late‑term abortion after six months). He has also voted on measures perceived as restricting reproductive and related care.
The candidate has expressed skepticism about large-scale carbon-pricing schemes and emphasized preserving jobs and energy affordability while supporting a role for fossil fuels as part of an energy 'bridge.' At the same time, he sponsored New Hampshire legislation in 2025 to establish a commercial property-assessed clean energy and resiliency (C-PACER) program, indicating some support for clean energy financing measures.
Dan Innis has voted against measures that would report certain mental-health records to the federal firearm background-check system and opposed New Hampshire proposals for red flag laws and expanded background checks. He expressed concerns those measures could lead to broader confiscation and has been part of Republican opposition in the State Senate to several gun-safety bills.
Dan Innis is in the news mainly because the SAVE America Act and related voting rules are becoming a campaign issue in the Senate race. The Republican-backed bill would require proof of citizenship to register to vote, and it is drawing sharp criticism over possible voter disenfranchisement. He is also being covered as part of the broader New Hampshire Senate contest, where Republicans are facing tougher political headwinds as public opposition to the Iran bombing campaign grows.



Aggregation source: FiftyPlusOne
2026
LatestCycle 2026
Source: FEC
New updates coming soon
We're monitoring and will update when new data impacts the race.