Priorities shaped by listening to the people of District 20 — and by the work of building things that last.
As a builder who pays the bills on every job, Patrick knows how bad policy drives up property taxes, insurance, and the price of everything. He will fight for spending discipline, targeted relief, and an end to mandates that punish working families.
Manchester families feel it every month at the grocery store and the tax bill. Patrick has lived it.
Every Manchester kid deserves a great education and a real path to a good life. Patrick supports strong core academics, expanded career & technical education, trade skills, and genuine transparency for parents — because not every child needs the same path.
Not every path leads to a desk. Some lead to a toolbox. Both matter.
Public safety is non-negotiable. Patrick will back law enforcement, support proven prevention, and back sensible policies that let families feel secure in their own streets and parks — without turning Manchester into something it isn’t.
Safe streets are the foundation. Everything else builds on that.
As a working builder, Patrick knows you can’t wish housing into existence with slogans. He supports practical growth that respects neighborhoods, keeps infrastructure costs under control, and cuts the red tape that makes attainable homes so expensive.
More homes, less bureaucracy. Respect for the neighborhoods we already love.
Manchester’s economy is built by people who actually do the work. Patrick will cut burdensome regulations that punish contractors and small operators, champion workforce training and apprenticeships, and make sure the people who build and maintain our city can afford to stay here.
The people swinging hammers and running small shops deserve a government that doesn’t make their life harder.
For years, Patrick has fought for government that prioritizes the people who already live here. He will carry that fight to Concord: less insider control, more transparency, smarter spending, and real input from Manchester residents before decisions are made.
The people who live here should have the loudest voice in what happens here.