U.S. House of Representatives
Elections ;2002 Bradley was first elected to Congress in 2002, winning the Republican nomination in a field of eight candidates, for the seat left vacant when Republican incumbent
John E. Sununu ran for the Senate. He defeated Democrat Martha Fuller Clark in the general election, winning with 58 percent of the vote. Bradley outspent Nadeau 3 to 1. Bradley's chief of staff, Debra J. Vanderbeek, ran his 2004 campaign. Tom Anfinson, the financial administrator in Bradley's government office, said that Vanderbeek was paid 100 percent of her salary until the end of May 2004, 80 percent between June and September, and 50 percent between October and early November. Bradley's re-election committee paid her $13,561 in salary for the campaign, which she failed to report as outside income to the Clerk of the House, plus $3,317 in reimbursements for un-itemized campaign expenses. ;2006 Bradley sought a third term in 2006. He defeated Michael Callis in the Republican primary on September 12, 2006, winning 87% of the vote. Bradley faced Democrat
Carol Shea-Porter and Libertarian party candidate Dan Belforti in the November 2006 general election. In what was considered an upset, Bradley lost his bid for re-election to Shea-Porter. Bradley and Shea-Porter met October 24 for a debate sponsored by
WMUR-TV and the
New Hampshire Union Leader, and debated again on October 31. ;2008 In January 2007, Bradley announced his intention to reclaim his former seat. He said he'd made up his mind a few days after his loss. He lost the general election to incumbent Carol Shea-Porter, 52%–46%.
Tenure Members of the media, colleagues and opponents described Bradley as a moderate in the
Republican Party when he was elected in 2002. He sided with his party by supporting the war in
Iraq, the reauthorization of the USA Patriot Act, the prohibition of federal funding of overseas abortion, the $5 billion subsidy for the Chinese nuclear program. However, he opposed President Bush's energy bill and supported the Medicare Part D prescription drug subsidy. He has cosponsored bills to loosen regulations on embryonic stem cell research. Bradley served on the Armed Services, Budget, Veterans' Affairs and Small Business committees. which would have amended the Constitution, requiring that marriage "shall consist only of the union of a man and a woman." Bradley opposed an increase in the national minimum wage during his time in Congress. Bradley, who has visited Iraq three times, has been a supporter of the Iraq War. In January 2006 he said "It is not possible to predict exactly when stability in Iraq will occur, but the progress is significant." In June 2006 he said that he did not support a specific timetable for withdrawing American troops from the country, but that he saw signs of progress that the United States would be able to leave "sooner rather than later". In August 2006 he said that Iraq needed a stable government and more security forces before the United States could set a withdrawal date. In October 2006 he said "I look at the fact that Iraq has become central to the war on terror", and "We have got to achieve stability in Iraq and prevent it from becoming a launching pad for terrorists." He lost his seat in 2006 to an outspokenly antiwar candidate,
Carol Shea-Porter. That year (and in 2008), the
Democrats swept the state legislature and both U.S. House seats. ==State Senate==