Elections In
1972, Thomson ran for governor again as a Republican. He defeated governor Walter R. Peterson Jr. In the Republican primary and faced Democrat Robert J. Crowley. In the general election he pledged to veto any new sales or income tax that was put on his desk, and he further promised not to raise existing taxes. In
1974, Thomson ran for a second term against Democrat Richard W. Leonard. Thomson was narrowly reelected, defeating Leonard 51% to 49%. In
1976, Thomson ran for a third term against Democrat Harry V. Spanos. He was re-elected in a landslide 58% to 42%. In
1978, Thomson ran for a fourth term, defeating former governor
Wesley Powell in the Republican primary and faced Democrat
Hugh Gallen. In the general election, Powell ran as an independent, splitting the Republican vote. Thomson lost re-election to Gallen 49% to 45%. In
1980, Thomson initially ran for president as a third party candidate but dropped out and ran for governor again as a Republican, defeating
Lou D'Allesandro for Republican nomination. Facing Gallen in a rematch, Thomson was defeated in a landslide 59% to 41%. In
1982, he ran for governor as an independent, getting just 2% of the vote.
Tenure Thomson coined the slogans "Low taxes are the result of low spending" and "Ax the Tax" to represent his fiscal philosophy. He was also a strong proponent of state
sovereignty. When Thomson learned that
Massachusetts tax agents were at New Hampshire liquor stores taking down the numbers on cars with Massachusetts license plates, he had them arrested. When he learned that
Maine had arrested a
Portsmouth, New Hampshire lobsterman, in Maine waters, he began what was known as the "Lobster war." The conflict ended in the U.S. Supreme Court with the drawing of an ocean boundary between the two states at the mouth of the
Piscataqua River. In 1978, Thomson appointed
David Souter to the Superior Court bench. Souter would later become a
Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. Thomson also appointed
Ivorey Cobb, the first
African-American judge in New Hampshire state history, to the New Hampshire Commission for Civil Rights. ==Controversies==