

Tim Harris: Championing Independent Leadership
Well, God damn it — how about we just get something done?
Truly, isn’t that how most people feel? Aren’t we tired of watching them argue back and forth without moving the needle or even picking up the thread? Democrats seem mad at Democrat politicians. Republicans seem mad at Republican politicians. Perhaps we need to get someone in there that’s not tied to a party and knows how to get things done.
That’s Tim Harris.
He’s worked around the planet. Worked on projects people were afraid to touch. Helped people throughout his lifetime since his work began in 1982. He’s not suffering from a lack of things to do — he’s an author of nine written works, and he could go around teaching the rest of the planet, close his eyes, cover his ears, and not do anything else.
But that would mean leaving you in the dirt the way this whole political system has done for the last 270 years.
There’s a lot of parties, but nobody’s having fun or getting anything done.
Tim Harris: WHO?
Tim Harris doesn’t fit in a box—and that’s the point.
For over four decades, he’s worked across 88 countries as an international trade delegate, built businesses that served communities, taught thousands through workshops and broadcasts, and helped people rebuild their lives when systems failed them. He’s a 10th-generation Apache Stoneman, an author working on a 20-book series about human alignment, and a metaphysical practitioner who understands that real change happens when you fix what’s broken instead of just talking about it.
Tim isn’t running for U.S. Senate because he wants to be a politician. He’s running because Washington has forgotten how to solve problems—and he hasn’t. He knows how to bring people together, cut through noise, and get things done. No party loyalty. No scripted answers. No performance. Just competence, honesty, and a refusal to let people be ignored while career politicians protect their positions.
New Hampshire deserves a Senator who sees the whole picture, respects every person, and has the spine to stand for what’s right even when it’s uncomfortable.
That’s Tim Harris.



Why Independent?

I am not a member of any political party for the same reason that George Washington wasn’t.
All the history books show that he was a Federalist, I believe — but if you don’t want to take my word for it, go and read his last State of the Union Address. They used to read that in Congress every year on his birthday, but they quit doing that because it laid political parties open, bare and bleeding.
Sounds like a good start, doesn’t it?
The idea is that the average person has enough to deal with. Why should they have to pay homage to unelected, unappointed — not even bureaucrats? It doesn’t make any sense.
So I am running as an independent. And hopefully we’ll get all their requirements done and I’ll jump through as many of their hoops as I can. But in order to do that, we need your participation.
If you want somebody who is as independent as you are and wants to live your life in the “Live Free or Die” state, you need to cast your ballot for me.
The What
There are a lot of things that could be done in DC — in spite of the destructiveness of someone else’s hundred things. I have my own version of a hundred things, but that’s because there are things that affect you every day. You already have at least half of that list in your head.
But as a Senator, I can get a lot more done with you and for you than I can from the outside of the system.
Here’s the kind of thing I’m talking about: Even though all of New Hampshire’s Congress people were actually in DC when it happened, nobody went and stood in front of the tractors when Donald Trump was demolishing one of our country’s major symbols. And even though Congress is full of lawyers, nobody was able to form an injunction to stop him from doing that.
That wasn’t his property. If a house sitter tore off your garage, don’t you think there’s something you could do about it?
If they’re that Bambi, then there’s no reason we should have expected them to hold the line on losing all of New Hampshire’s health care.
And I know the one thing you’re worried about: they still have theirs.
The When
If you had to have somebody stand up for you right now, would you want a Scottish Highlander Paladin — or one of those other guys?
There are some good people in Congress: Cory Booker, AOC, Josh Hawley. But none of those people live in New Hampshire. I do.
If you’ve got to be in a dogfight, don’t send a Chihuahua or a blind one.
Here’s the problem: If those people had had the guts, they would have used them already — instead of worrying about whether or not they’re going to lose their place in line as being “the most bipartisan.”
There are some things you have to stand up for whether you want to or not.
What’s that old saying my grandfather used to say? “If you don’t stand for something, you’ll fall for anything.”
Tell me that doesn’t completely define the politics for New Hampshire in the last couple of decades.
New Hampshire might not be the biggest state, but it takes up a major amount of room in my heart.
The Where
“Where” is a lot bigger than Washington DC.
But considering how many Congresspeople never seem to remember where home is and never go back — that’s not my problem. I know where my heart and soul live. It’s right here. I’ve got a beautiful piece of property in Greenland, New Hampshire, and in the many times I’ve been to DC, I haven’t found anything that replaces it.
I’m not saying I won’t be there for the important stuff, but I’m not going to sit around and drink martinis when we have starving and freezing children here in New Hampshire.
“Where” is also where else.
There’s stuff going on in our oceans — and if you don’t believe me, check with the people at Odiorne Science Center. We’ve got things affecting our local fishing and our local farms that could be improved when nobody in Congress has the backbone to even ask a question. I’m going to ask.
I was raised as a hunter, fisherman, and someone who loves the environment. I volunteered to work at the state parks and at Odiorne. And I haven’t seen any of my other competitors for this position even show their face in the place except as a campaign stop — maybe.
One of them brags a lot about bringing in funds for homeless or HUD housing. Maybe he needs to check with the housing advocates that don’t work there and ask them why the job is so far undone you almost don’t even recognize that anybody passed a dollar past it.
By the way, I have talked to them — at the HUD office and in the streets, trying to help people.
And speaking of the homeless, I’m working with major corporations to come up with a solution that requires no new tax dollars.
The Why
I have been all over the world and all over the Americas — north, south, east, and west. Guess where I come home to.
Do you think that’s because I’ve got nowhere else to go?
I’m not those other candidates. I teach people how to be the Avatar of their own life. I show people through example and through my books that life can be a fantastic experience — you just have to embrace it.
I’m not worried or looking for cookie crumbs, little bits of fun. I want everybody in the state of New Hampshire to live their life that way, and I will do whatever it takes to see that opportunity becomes yours.
Life isn’t perfect, and sometimes it’s hard — but you don’t need government to make it worse.
Healthcare. Food in our food banks. Care for seniors and veterans. Come on, folks.
That they have the audacity to try and explain why they can’t do that is all the reason in the world they shouldn’t be in those jobs.
The How
The “how” isn’t as hard as you might think.
Let me give you one example: There are lots of empty buildings in the state of New Hampshire that are owned by the federal government. All I need is a lock undone. If they don’t give me the lock, I have an F-350. It has a key mechanism they haven’t thought of yet.
We’ve got lots of beds. I may have to get some mattresses donated. But it’s going to cost us a lot less than the $50 to $70,000 it costs us every time one of those people ends up going to the emergency room.
So how am I going to get a lot of this done? We already have the stuff. Your tax dollars have already paid for it.
Is anyone so callous that they can’t see their way through to helping people not freeze to death in the wintertime or die of exposure in the summertime?
Apparently we do have those kind of people. That’s your senators and congressmen of the past.
I’m not one of those.
This doesn’t require new appropriations — they’ve had lots of those. This doesn’t require a new committee — they’ve had lots of those too.
There is food stored in warehouses in this state that the taxpayers have paid for. Why isn’t that in our food banks? We have reserves of almost everything that we’ve just been collecting. If not now — when?
