Bolduc has been described by newspapers and wire services as far-right.[5] He initially endorsed the false Stop the Steal conspiracy theory positing that the 2020 U.S. presidential election was rigged to favor Joe Biden. He later acknowledged that the election was not stolen, stating that his previous positions were "political games".[4]
In June 2019, Bolduc entered the 2020 United States Senate election in New Hampshire, seeking the Republican nomination to run against incumbent Democratic senator Jeanne Shaheen. He lost the Republican primary to Corky Messner, who was endorsed by then-President Donald Trump.[16] During the election campaign, Bolduc ran a television ad attacking Democrats as "a bunch of liberal, socialistpansies", a remark perceived as being homophobic.[17]
After the 2020 election, Bolduc closely tied himself to Trump.[18] In February 2021, he announced that he would run for Senate again in the 2022 election,[19] hoping to challenge Democratic incumbent Senator Maggie Hassan.[20] In the Republican primary, he ran against Chuck Morse, the New Hampshire State Senate president. Bolduc sought endorsement by Trump, who made no endorsement in the primary[21][22] but praised Bolduc as a "strong guy, tough guy".[21] On September 14, Bolduc defeated Morse and won the Republican primary election.[23]
Accusations against Chris Sununu
After Chris Sununu announced in November 2021 that he would seek reelection as governor and would not run for U.S. Senate—an announcement that was viewed as a setback for the Republicans' hopes of winning Hassan's seat[18][24]—Bolduc gave a conspiracy-filled interview on conservative talk radio in which he denounced Sununu, a fellow Republican, as a "Chinese Communist sympathizer" and claimed that Sununu's business "supports terrorism".[18][25] Sununu has described Bolduc as "not a serious candidate" and a "conspiracy-theorist extremist"; Sununu endorsed Bolduc's primary rival, Chuck Morse.[26][27] However, Sununu endorsed Bolduc for the general election.[28]
Political positions
Bolduc was described as far-right during his 2022 Senate run as a Republican candidate.[29][30][31]
Bolduc was a 2020 presidential election denier.[27] He endorsed Donald Trump's false claim[34][35][36] that the 2020 presidential election was rigged to favor Joe Biden. In May 2021, Bolduc was one of 124 retired generals and admirals who signed an open letter promoting the lie that the presidential election was "rigged" in Biden's favor.[37] Throughout his campaign for the Republican nomination for U.S. Senate, Bolduc continued to promote the false claim that the election was stolen and that Trump actually won; in an August 2022 primary debate, he said of his signing the May 2021 letter: "damn it, I stand by [it]".[38]
Two days after Bolduc won the Republican primary in September 2021, he reversed his stance on the 2020 election: "I have come to the conclusion, and I want to be definitive on this, the election was not stolen." After he lost the Senate election to Hassan in November, Bolduc told The New Yorker, "Joe Biden won. He is the legitimate President of the United States. President Trump should have accepted that."[40]
But Bolduc continued to promote his false claims that the election was marred by fraud.[41][42][43] "I went through a learning process on the whole thing and came out the other end to it not being a stolen election but one with irregularities and fraud, like a lot of other people on both sides of the aisle", he said in November.[40]
Bolduc has repeated misinformation about COVID-19. He has falsely claimed that COVID-19 vaccines are really "Bill Gates saying we should put [micro]chips inside people" and asserted that the use of face masks to control the spread of the virus "cause[s] more problems than they solve".[48][49][50]
Foreign policy
In a February 2021 op-ed in USA Today, Bolduc criticized the Afghanistan Study Group recommendation urging a reversal on the scheduled withdrawal of U.S. military forces from Afghanistan. Bolduc urged the Biden administration to stick with the withdrawal deadline as set by the Trump administration.[51]
Bolduc is opposed to the legalization of marijuana, and considers it to be a gateway drug and a risk to public safety. In a July 2020 interview with WMUR-TV, Bolduc stated that "My big problem with marijuana is that it could be an entry drug and a gateway for our children. And I don't not want our children to be introduced to drugs. We have a big enough drug problem here, which nobody has really done anything about," and "when you get in a motor vehicle and you drive [under the influence of marijuana], your sobriety is impaired, and that is very, very dangerous. And until we get controls or some sort of system and technology in place for our police to be able to test sobriety of people that that are operating under the influence of marijuana, this is a public safety issue."[55]
Personal life
Bolduc lives in Stratham, New Hampshire, with his wife Sharon.[56] They have three sons: Joshua, Matthew, and Zachary.[1]
In 2024, it was announced that Bolduc was now employed as a police officer in Pittsfield, New Hampshire. He was hired by Pittsfield Police Chief Joe Collins as a patrolman.[4]
^ abSearcey, Dionne (October 7, 2016). "A General's New Mission: Leading a Charge Against PTSD". New York Times. Retrieved August 24, 2021. When a bomb dropped on his position in Afghanistan in 2001 — a friendly fire accident — General Bolduc's hip was badly damaged. ... General Bolduc learned that not only did he suffer from PTSD, but he also had a bullet-size spot on his brain, an injury probably dating to his helicopter crash in Afghanistan in 2005.
^Morang, Ralph (June 3, 2018). "Army General Prefers Therapy, Not Medication". Foster's Daily Democrat. Retrieved August 24, 2021. combat veterans can have injuries that do not show: Post-traumatic stress and traumatic brain injuries. Bolduc has both.
^Brufke, Juliegrace (August 19, 2022). "Sununu Says Bolduc Is 'Not a Serious Candidate,' Won't Endorse Him". Washington Examiner. Retrieved September 13, 2022. Bolduc came under fire in 2020 for railing against masks during the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic and baselessly alleging that vaccines are 'Bill Gates saying we should put chips inside people.'