New Mexico
New Mexico Democrats vie for attorney general in primary
SANTA FE – Democratic voters are deciding on a nominee for New Mexico lawyer basic as state prosecutors cope with a surge in city gun violence, exterior claims to scarce water provides and issues about air pollution, shopper safety and political extremism.
Albuquerque-based District Lawyer Raúl Torrez is operating towards State Auditor Brian Colón for the Democratic endorsement to succeed termed-out Democratic Lawyer Normal Hector Balderas. Absentee and early in-person voting are underway upfront of Election Day on Tuesday.
The winner will compete towards Republican lawyer and U.S. Marine veteran Jeremy Michael Homosexual of Gallup. Republicans have held the workplace solely 3 times in New Mexico’s 110-year historical past as a state.
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Torrez, a second-term district lawyer for the county encompassing Albuquerque, has portrayed himself as a seasoned courtroom lawyer and prosecutor of crime and corruption.
He has pledged to increase the state’s capability and experience to deal with consumer-rights litigation and prevail in a chronic authorized battle with Texas over administration of Rio Grande waters amid a decades-long drought.
Colón is searching for to comply with within the footsteps of Balderas, who parlayed his work as state auditor right into a profitable bid for lawyer basic in 2014. The 2 beforehand labored on the identical regulation agency.
Colón has emphasised his upbringing in an impoverished New Mexico household and his watchdog function as auditor reviewing native authorities funds and calling out misconduct by pubic officers — together with Las Vegas ex-Mayor Tonita Gurule-Giron earlier than her convictions of interfering in metropolis contracts to learn her boyfriend.
The marketing campaign has solid new gentle on the present observe of hiring exterior legal professionals to characterize New Mexico in advanced shopper safety and class-action lawsuits.
Torrez has criticized Colón for accepting marketing campaign contributions from regulation companies that might profit from referrals. Colón defended the system as efficient and has pledged a clear course of in choosing exterior legal professionals.
Torrez’s current tenure as district lawyer coincides with a criminal offense disaster in Albuquerque, together with a record-setting variety of homicides in 2021.
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Torrez has sought unsuccessfully to roll again bail reforms that allowed judges to disclaim pre-trial launch to harmful defendants and launch low-risk defendants who may stay in jail as a result of they’ll’t afford bail bonds.
Each candidates have stated they are going to assist entry to abortion, implement state gun management provisions and confront political extremists who flout the regulation.
Torrez is prosecuting a right-wing militia that introduced rifles and tactical gear to a 2020 protest in Albuquerque towards a statue of Spanish conqueror Juan de Oñate.
Torrez beforehand served as as a federal prosecutor and senior adviser on the U.S. Justice Division below Lawyer Normal Eric Holder throughout Barack Obama’s presidency. Colón is a former chairman of the New Mexico Democratic Social gathering.
Individually, 5 Republican candidates for governor are competing in Tuesday’s main to tackle incumbent Democratic Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham.
Democrats are additionally deciding on nominees in open races for state auditor and treasurer.
The first will lock in nominees to problem incumbent Democratic U.S. Rep. Melanie Stansbury of Albuquerque and Republican Congresswoman Yvette Herrell of Alamogordo.
New Mexico
Employer roundtables scheduled in southeast NM
New Mexico
New Mexico Green Amendment to be filed in Legislature this week • Source New Mexico
A proposal to create a fundamental right to a clean environment on par with other rights found in New Mexico’s constitution will return to the Legislature in the coming days.
The sponsors will prefile the legislation this week, Sen. Harold Pope (D-Albuquerque), said during a news conference Tuesday with other sponsors and advocates. Lawmakers have already turned in bills dealing with tribal education, retired public sector workers’ health care and foster care in advance of the session starting Jan. 21.
If passed and signed into law, the legislation would create a ballot question asking voters whether to add a Green Amendment to the New Mexico Constitution.
Traditional environmental laws often fail to prevent harm because they focus on regulating how much damage pollution does, rather than preventing it altogether, argues Maya van Rossum, founder of the nonprofit Green Amendments for the Generations.
Three states have constitutional Green Amendments that protect people’s right to clean water and air, a safe climate and a healthy environment, van Rossum said during the news conference: Pennsylvania, Montana and New Jersey.
Similar amendments have been proposed in 19 other states, she said, with an ongoing ballot initiative in one state.
If the amendment passes, New Mexico would be the first state in the country to explicitly recognize in its state constitutional Bill of Rights the right of all people, including future generations, to a safe climate, she said.
It would also be the first to lift up critical environmental justice protections to that highest constitutional level, she said.
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Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham’s administration has passed strong regulations to protect the environment, said Sen. Antoinette Sedillo López (D-Albuquerque), but she is worried about how the federal government could try to roll back those gains.
The Green Amendment is a way to protect New Mexico from the excesses of the incoming Donald Trump administration, she said.
It will be the fifth time the Green Amendment has been debated at the Roundhouse. The proposal has been introduced every year since 2021.
Previous versions of the bill would have repealed an existing part of the state constitution that recognizes that the Legislature has a duty to protect commonly owned natural resources and ensure the public can use them. This year’s version keeps that in place, van Rossum said.
It took 10 years of persistent advocacy and some changes in who had power at the Roundhouse to end the death penalty, Sedillo López said.
“We have some changes in the Legislature, and we have a growing number of advocates who continue to provide sustained advocacy,” she said of the efforts around the Green Amendment. “And, we have persistent legislators. We will get this done.”
It also took five years of legislative debate to create New Mexico’s community solar program, Rep. Patricia Roybal Caballero (D-Albuquerque) noted.
Roybal Caballero said so long as New Mexico lacks necessary guardrails like the Green Amendment, the state’s inhabitants remain at risk of declining children’s health, raging wildfires and flash floods.
“Our right to clean air, water, soil and environment should be protected above profits for the elite,” Roybal Caballero said. “Let New Mexicans decide if we prefer drinkable water for ourselves and future generations, or to continue to line the pocketbooks of the elite few.”
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New Mexico
Winter weather advisory in effect for parts of New Mexico
It’s going to be a chilly day across New Mexico. See the latest conditions at KOB.com/Weather.
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — A winter weather advisory is in effect in parts of New Mexico where snow and slick roads are possible through Friday.
The advisory warns of 1-3 inches of snow and slick roads for places in southern New Mexico through Friday at 5 a.m. Snow accumulations could total as much as five inches in Ruidoso, two inches in Roswell and 1.7 inches in Silver City.
Elsewhere, Tuesday will see the canyon winds pick up and temperatures cool down as a backdoor cold front comes barging in.
Meteorologist Kira Miner shares all the details in her full forecast in the video above.
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