Hey Keith, did you get a chance to answer that Maine question yet?
Your question was, "Out of curiousity, what was the reason for choosing NH over Maine? Less than 6,000 people voted in the primaries in Maine this year. Over 200,000 voted in the NH primaries."
Heck, back in 2002, we didn't even know if Ron Paul was going to run for President again. The idea of the FSP isn't to get a Republican Presidential candidate to win the Republican Primary/Caucus in one state. Also, I don't consider the process in Maine being so complicated and unwelcoming a positive thing.
All of the low population states were considered, at first. HI was eliminated because of how statist it is and RI was eliminated for that reason along with the corruption. Out of the 10 states that were left, NH, WY and MT were the most popular. NH was popular because it had the strongest LP in the nation, no personal income tax, no general sales tax and the motto live free or die, among other reasons. WY was popular because of the lack on personal income tax, no general corporate tax and low population, among other things. MT was popular because of Big Sky Country and how it used to have unique freedoms such as reasonable speed limits instead of posted speed limits on Interstates and allowed drinking and driving, among other things.
ME wasn't really popular because it has near the worst economic freedom in the US and when compared to NH was worse in almost every way. ME also had some of the problems that the western states had. The population centers in ME are spread out, it's colder than NH, has less jobs, has less ability to commute out of state for jobs and less future job development. The governor of NH joined as a Friend of the FSP and welcomed FSPs to come on up. Other governors were not as welcoming. For example, the MT governor encouraged us to move to ID and the ID governor encouraged us to move elsewhere. The NH GOP Chair said, "If these individuals choose to come to New Hampshire they'll find an atmosphere that's very open to grassroots activities and very strong and independent voter participation." NH also had the highest amount of free staters when the vote happened. As I said before, NH had the strongest LP in the county and that organization worked hard to get the FSP to select NH. Ironically, since then, the NH GOP has become so welcoming to libertarians and even former Libertarians (Party members) that the NH LP isn't the strongest LP in the county anymore.
Read about it here,
http://freestateproject.org/about/essay_archive/benson.php
FSP which state voting results:
1. New Hampshire
2. Wyoming
3. Montana
4. Idaho
5. Alaska
6. Maine
7. Vermont
8. Delaware
9. South Dakota
10. North Dakota
1st place voting results:
NH 749
ME 118
ND 24
2nd place voting results:
NH 341
ME 257
ND 38
The vote was taken with the Condorcet method. Read about it and the results here,
http://freestateproject.org/archives/state_vote/FSP-ECL-CertificationCompleted.htm
BTW, I agree that a "Free Town Project" would probably be 'easier'... it may not necessarily be better. When working on the town level it's more likely you'll hit a freedom ceiling. I'd love to see you try to evict the Feds on the town level for example... on the state level, you
may be able to get away with it.
That said, there's no reason not to do a "Free Town Project" within NH. A sub movement is win/win.
There is no official Free Town Project in but the people in Grafton are many years ahead of what people are thinking about doing when they think about the FTP in the rest of the US. Heck, even in Manchester, the largest city in NH (110,000 or so), without the help of liberty activists, one of the alderman (city councilors) and 3 of the State Reps. wouldn't be elected. Liberty activists are involved with the Manchester GOP. Heck, a liberty activist was just given their activist of the year award.
I'm not against the idea of liberty activists concentrating in one town or city. It is certainly happening in NH. However, having 1 pro-liberty State Senator isn't enough. Heck, we have 3 State Senators that endorsed Ron Paul right now, and that isn't enough.
Even on the state level, good things are happening. The Speak of the House wouldn't have been elected without FSPers, and he is on video praising FSPers. The Senate Majority Leader (a former US Rep.) welcomed FSPers to NH. The GOP Platform wouldn't support jury nullification without FSPers. We also helped get a bill on that through both the NH House and the NH Senate.