New Mexico
Record number of Hispanic Republicans run for New Mexico House seats
New Mexico Republicans are attracting a document variety of Hispanic candidates for state Home seats, one other signal the GOP is aggressively courting Latino voters this yr.
Why it issues: New Mexico has the best proportion of Hispanics of any state. It is also dominated by Democrats, who management the governor’s workplace, legislature, two U.S. Senate seats and two of three Home seats. However a nationwide, multi-year effort to recruit various, native GOP slates is exhibiting outcomes.
Driving the information: An Axios evaluation of New Mexico candidates discovered that 18 Hispanic Republicans are in search of seats within the state’s 70-member decrease chamber the place Democrats maintain a 45-24-1 majority.
- The Hispanic GOP candidates are working towards Democrats in aggressive rural and concrete seats the place the outcomes are laborious to foretell after redistricting.
The massive image: The spike in Latino GOP candidates in New Mexico displays broader Republican recruiting efforts throughout the nation.
- The Nationwide Republican Congressional Committee advised Axios that 103 Hispanic GOP candidates are in search of U.S. Home seats this yr — a document for the celebration.
- Texas Republicans are hoping to ship the state’s first Latina Republicans to Congress with Monica De La Cruz and Mayra Flores difficult Democrats amid political shifts in South Texas.
- James Wesolek, a spokesman for the Republican Get together of Texas, mentioned the celebration in Texas shouldn’t be holding monitor of candidates’ race, intercourse, or age in its state Home races.
What they’re saying: “Hispanic voters are realizing that the Democrats are transferring additional to the left nationally and within the state, and that the conservative Hispanic voters align with us far more,” Steve Pearce, chair of the Republican Get together of New Mexico, advised Axios.
- Pearce mentioned New Mexico Republicans started recruiting Hispanics in 2017 to run for county chairs and county commissioner seats and now a few of these officers are working for state Home seats.
Sure, however: Democratic Get together of New Mexico spokesperson Delaney Corcoran mentioned 18 GOP candidates is hardly a groundswell and that folks of coloration stay underrepresented within the New Mexico GOP.
- “Proper now 37 out of 47 Hispanic members of the New Mexico legislature are Democrats, and this yr greater than 40 Hispanic Democrats are working for state Home,” Corcoran mentioned.
- “Whereas Democrats have been centered on the sorts of kitchen-table points that make a distinction to all New Mexicans, Republicans have been spewing extremist rhetoric, sowing division, and alienating New Mexicans.”
New Mexico Democratic political guide Sisto Abeyta mentioned Democrats in New Mexico and different states must dedicate extra sources to rural areas the place Hispanic voters have been ignored.
- “In recent times, we’re seeing extra [Hispanic Republican] candidates coming from rural areas and communities of poverty.”
Go deeper: Inflation hits Latino assist for Democrats, ballot exhibits
Subscribe to Axios Latino and get extra information that issues about Latinos and Latin America, delivered proper to your inbox on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
New Mexico
New Mexico weather alert: Dense fog and snow expected along I-40 this week – Travel And Tour World
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New Mexico
Albuquerque bakery struggles to keep up with biscochito demand during holiday season
For Celina’s Biscochitos that means making double if not three times more biscochitos to make sure locals and people nationwide have a sweet taste of New Mexico tradition.
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. – If you’re from New Mexico, there’s a popular sweet treat that will be on the dessert table this holiday season, biscochitos.
While you can buy them year-round, the holidays are especially busy for bakeries who specialize in making them.
For Celina’s Biscochitos that means making double if not three times more biscochitos to make sure locals and people nationwide have a sweet taste of New Mexico tradition.
“We probably do on average about anywhere from about, this year, probably about maybe 400 to 600 dozen a day,” said Celina Grife, co-owner of Celina’s Biscochitos.
It’s no easy job making biscochitos.
For the past 14 years, Celina’s Biscochitos has been making her grandma’s recipe. This year, just like the rest, there is a high demand for our state’s official cookie, especially during the holidays.
“We’re just trying to keep up with the demand. So everyday by the end of the day, we’re just trying to scramble to make sure that we have enough cookies on the shelf for our customers, so that way they can pick them up at the end of the day,” said Grife.
They’re making anywhere from 4,000 to over 7,000 cookies a day. That’s two to three times more than what they usually make outside of the holiday season.
Over the years, Grife has added more than just their traditional cookie.
“Our very first flavor was the red chile biscochito. And then one thing lead to another, we just started playing with it,” Grife said.
Now they offer red and green chile, lemon, blue corn pinion and chocolate chip. This isn’t just the unique, different flavors they offer, it’s the tradition they carry on.
“We are one of the few commercial companies that are still making them the traditional way. So we still use lard, and by lard, I mean the old-fashioned blue and white container that everybody uses at home,” said Grife. “We still use brandy in our product as well. We still use the old fashion anise.”
One thing Grife has learned over the years is that for some people, a biscochito is much more than just a cookie.
“This is very personal to people, and I had no idea how personal it was to people. I could be working at an event, and I’ll have people say, ‘No, I can’t have yours because my mom or my aunt or my uncle.’ Whatever! Somebody makes them in the family,” said Grife. “Or we get somebody who doesn’t have that family member with them anymore, and they try ours, and they’re kind of like, ‘This brings back so many memories.’”
Grife says their goal is to keep that traditional biscochito flavor and texture, in every cookie they make.
New Mexico
New Mexico ski season in full swing despite warm December
The sun is out and so are the skiers and snowboarders at Sandia Peak Ski Area. Man-made snow here and at other ski areas around the state is helping keep more runs open during this warmer than usual December.
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. – The sun is out and so are the skiers and snowboarders at Sandia Peak Ski Area. Man-made snow here and at other ski areas around the state is helping keep more runs open during this warmer than usual December.
“It’s very fun. I like the weather. It’s very sunny today,” said Carlos Morales, a skier.
Morales and his family were out getting some practice runs in on the slopes Tuesday afternoon. He and several others were enjoying the snow and the sun.
“Pretty good. It was a little hot, for sure. I kind of like it because I’m not freezing. I was able to wear my sunglasses and not the goggles, just because it wasn’t too crazy cold today. But it was nice. It was perfect weather,” said Hector Salazar, a snowboarder.
Salazar says now that Sandia Peak Ski Area is open seven days a week, it’s the perfect time to practice your skills since these slopes are not too crowded.
Ski New Mexico Executive Director Christy Germscheid says things are expected to pick up over the holidays.
“I think we probably have had slightly slower numbers on weekends and things since Thanksgiving when a lot of the resorts opened now. But Christmas is always rocking up here. We have very loyal Christmas guests,” said Germscheid.
She says it’s too soon to tell how the season is doing compared to years past. But the early snow pack from November helped lay the groundwork for snow machines.
“Expanding terrain, opening new terrain, has taken longer, been a little more limited based on the snowfall or lack of natural snow. So we’re hoping that Mother Nature kicks in here real soon,” Germscheid said.
Germscheid says every ski area in the state has snow machines. Crews at Sandia Peak Ski Area say they’ve been able to make enough snow to get almost all the runs open.
Snowboarders and skiers don’t seem to mind where the snow comes from.
“It feels good. The man-made snow, you could definitely feel that it’s a little bit harsher, it’s a little bit firmer. So if you were to take a fall, maybe hurt a little bit more, but it felt pretty good the whole time,” said Salazar.
Everyone is hoping for Mother Nature to give more snow but if not crews are just waiting for the perfect conditions to make more.
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