Join NMOP On CivNet
Dear New Mexico Open Primary Supporters,
WeâÂÂre excited to announce that weâÂÂre going to be using CivNet, a New Mexico-based online network for community action, for a lot of our ongoing communication. One of NMOPâÂÂs values is to strive for a dialogue from every political persuasion. In that vein, CivNet provides an open platform for community members to connect with diverse individuals who come together on these important political process reform issues, find opportunities to get involved, and organize to take action. àWe are going to be leading A LOT of action over the next 6 months as we approach the next legislative session.
This will also allow us to better assess who wants to be active with our organization and who wants just occasional updates. àWe will continue to send out email through this list, but if youâÂÂd like to get engaged on a more regular basis and learn more about what NMOP is working on regularly, please sign up for CivNet and join the NM Open Primaries Project on CivNet. If you have any questions, feel free to email help@civnet.com or you can learn more at www.civnet.com.ÃÂ
Best regards,
The NMOP Board
ÃÂ
NMOP Media Update for May 2017
Friends,
New Mexico Open Primaries continues to attract state-wide,and national, media attention with the progress we have made - educating New Mexicans and our leaders about the need for structural political reform:
Please take a moment to read the pieces linked below and share these them through email and social media:spread the word - we're making progress and change is coming
From the Independent Voter Network:ÃÂ Upcoming Lawsuit: New Mexico Closed Primaries Violate State Constitution
This piece published by Now Associations:ÃÂ How One Advocacy Group Is Making The Case For Open Primaries in New Mexico
Make sure to Click on this link for this piece -ÃÂ Nonprofit Group Pushes for Open Primary ElectionsÃÂ - which appeared in the Farmington Daily Times above the fold.ÃÂ
Candidate Responses to Election Reform
Dear New Mexico Open Primary Supporters:
The NMOP Board is pleased to announce the results of our first general election survey.ÃÂ We asked all candidates in this 2016 general election running for the State Senate, the State House, the Secretary of State and Congress to complete a short on-line survey.ÃÂ Twenty-one candidates responded.
Things you can do:
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VOTE
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Use this information to help you decide who to vote for
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Share this information with other voters
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Contact your candidates to let them know the importance of these issues to you
ÃÂ
Click HERE for a table containing the complete survey results.
Thank you for your support of NMOP.ÃÂ We welcome your input and suggestions and of course your financial support. You can find usÃÂ here.
Bob Perls and the NMOP Board
Independent Candidate Ballot Access Challenge Update
The court date for our independent candidate ballot access challenge is September 2 at 3 pm in District Court in Santa Fe. Founder Bob Perls will be there and if allowed, will testify.
Thanks so much to Rod Frechette for filing and being the attorney, all pro bono!
Court challenges are not exciting, but in a state without citizen ballot initiative and referendum, we must rely on the courts to push the legislature forward so that we have competitive elections. Making ballot access fair to all candidates is just one of a number of reforms New Mexico Open Primaries is dedicated to.
NMOP Mission & Goals
New Mexico Open Primaries updated 2016-2017 MISSION and Goal statement
ÃÂ
To ensure that every voter has equal protection and opportunity under the law to vote in every election.
ÃÂ
Goals:
ÃÂ
1) Adopt Open Primaries where all voters can vote in all elections without joining a political party;
2) Create competitive elections all the time through the adoption of independent re-districting commissions as well as fair and equal ballot access requirements for all candidates;
3) Instigate court challenges to force the legislature to end closed primaries and discriminatory ballot access practices
4) Execute a state-wide education campaign highlighting the advantages of non-partisan, inclusive politics that rewards coalition-building and problem-solving
5) Increase voter engagement and confidence in our government by educating voters how these reforms improve legislative performance.
Rejected PRC hopeful: NM ballot rules unfair
NMOP believes that we must reduce the discriminatory ballot access requirements of independent and third party candidates to offer more choices for NM voters. With the help of a dozen or so volunteers, Bob Perls turned in 1350 signatures for the PRC District 1 race to the Secretary of StateâÂÂs office last Thursday so that he has standing to sue in state District Court so that future non-aligned candidates can run and NOT have to collect 3-10 times the number of signatures as major party candidates to get on the ballot. To qualify Bob would have had to turn in 3650 signatures. Rod Frechette is handling the case and we are deeply appreciative of this pro bono work.
NMOP will continue to offer financial and people power to help all independent candidates in an effort to make all elections more competitive. 70 percent of all NM elections have NO competition and democracy suffers. Court challenges will be an ongoing part of our strategy.
Please donate to support the ongoing cost of this court challenge. We file July 15 and the case should be heard in August.
Thanks.
HereÃÂ is a link to the PDF of the following Albuquerque Journal Article:
9 Jul 2016 -ÃÂ Albuquerque Journal -ÃÂ DEBORAH BAKER
Rejected PRC hopeful: NM ballot rules unfair
Former state Rep. Bob Perls was rejected this week by the secretary of state as an independent candidate for the Public Regulation Commission and says heâÂÂs going to challenge it.
Perls will ask a state District Court to strike down New MexicoâÂÂs âÂÂunfair and discriminatoryâ requirements for independent and minor party candidates to get on the ballot.
The Corrales businessman and former foreign service officer with the U.S. Department of State says he turned in about 1,350 votersâ signatures to qualify for the Nov. 8 general election ballot. The requirement for an independent, however, is 3,650.
Perls says that if he were a Democrat (which he was when he served in the House in the âÂÂ90s), he would have had to submit about 750 signatures, and if he were a Republican, about 450.
âÂÂSince all voters are supposed to have equal access to the ballot box, does this protection extend to candidates who should have equal access to the ballot?â he said in a news release.
Right now, there is only one candidate on the ballot in AlbuquerqueâÂÂs PRC District 1, Democrat Cynthia Hall.
MINOR PARTIES: The secretary of state, following last weekâÂÂs filing deadline, has qualified a couple of new minor political parties that could nominate presidential candidates for the Nov. 8 ballot.
The Party for Socialism and Liberation is running Gloria La Riva of San Francisco, who was born and raised in Albuquerque, as its presidential candidate. La Riva has previously been the partyâÂÂs presidential nominee and has run for governor in California on the Peace and Freedom Party ticket.
Minor parties have until Sept. 13 to submit their nominees to the secretary of state.
Also qualified this week as a minor party was the American Delta Party, which according to Ballot Access News was founded by San Diego businessman Roque âÂÂRockyâ De La Fuente as a vehicle for a possible independent presidential bid. De La Fuente ran in some states in the Democratic presidential primaries.
Four other minor parties already were qualified in New Mexico, including the Constitution Party, whose presidential nominee, Darrell Castle, is on the ballot in November. Former Gov. Gary Johnson is expected to be on the ballot for the Libertarian Party. LEGISLATURE: On the legislative side, Fran Gallegos was disqualified as a Green Party candidate in Senate District 39, where Republican incumbent Ted Barela faces Democratic challenger Liz Stefanics. The secretary of state said she hadnâÂÂt been properly nominated by the party. In House District 54, independent Freddie Joe Nichols is newly on the ballot, challenging Republican incumbent James Townsend.
2016 NMOP Candidate Survey Results
Our Board sent out surveys (download link here) ÃÂ to all state rep, state senate and congressional candidates with primary election opposition and a summary of the results is posted below. ÃÂ Please review the results and we hope you vote accordingly.ÃÂ Many candidates did not respond and if they did not we have to assume they are not supportive of our agenda.ÃÂ We will do so again for the general election in November. ÃÂ The results so far are as follows (to download as a spreadsheet click the link here):
ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ |
ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ |
NAME | House/Senate District | Rating | Phone | Address | Email address |
ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ |
Anaya, Mike | SD 39 | AA | 505 490-2338 | 4 El Tanque ViejoÃÂ Galisto, NM 87540 | mike anya2010@mail,com |
Berkeimer, Chris | HD 25 | AA | 505 280-7693 | 2721 Indiana NE Albuquerque, NM 871100 | berkque@mail.com |
Dodson, Matt | SD 1 | AA | 505 325-2159 | 620 Gladeiew Dr.ÃÂ Farmington, NM 87401 | mateododson@yahoo.com |
Morgan, Rebecca | SD 1 | AAA | 505 327-3658 | 800 W30th St. Farmington, NM 87401 | rebmorgan@sn.com |
Jaramillo, Ray | HD 35 | AAA | 575 612-3205 | 1213 Osage Ct.ÃÂ Las Cruces, NM 88005 | Rayjaramillo4nmrep35@yahoo.com |
Sherman, Frederick | HD 32 | AA | 575 546-8846 | 210 S. SilverÃÂ Deming, NM 88030 | shermanforstaterep@gmail.org |
Thompson, Elizabeth | HD 24 | AA | 505 239-1781 | 1216 Westerfield drÃÂ Albuquerque, NM 87112 | lizthompson4nm@gmail.comÃÂ |
Whitlock, Karen | HD 38 | O | 575 574-5221 | P.O. Box 516ÃÂ Mimbres, NM 88049 | friendsforkaren8@gmail.com |
Wilder, James | SD 19 | A | 505 281-2357 | P.O. Box 1162ÃÂ Tivezias, NM 7059 | info@electjimwilder.com |
ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ |
ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ |
KEY: | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | For those answering all questions: | ÃÂ |
ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ |
ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | 23 - 30 points ---ÃÂ AAA rating | ÃÂ |
ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | 15 - 22 Points --ÃÂ ÃÂ ÃÂ AA rating | ÃÂ |
ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ 8-ÃÂ 14 Points --ÃÂ ÃÂ ÃÂ ÃÂ ÃÂ A rating | ÃÂ |
ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ 0 -ÃÂ 13 Points -ÃÂ ÃÂ ÃÂ ÃÂ 0 rating | ÃÂ |
ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ |
ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ |
ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | For those answering only the state-related questions: | ÃÂ |
ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ |
ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | 19 - 24 points -- AAA | ÃÂ |
ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | 14 - 18 points --ÃÂ ÃÂ AA | ÃÂ |
ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ 8 -ÃÂ 13 points --ÃÂ ÃÂ ÃÂ ÃÂ A | ÃÂ |
ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ 0 -ÃÂ 12 points -0 rating | ÃÂ |
ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ |
ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | Yes answers - 2 points | ÃÂ |
ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | Maybe answers - 1 point | ÃÂ |
ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | ÃÂ | No answers -no pointsÃÂ |
First Perls Interview on Rock of Talk
This is a link to the first interview NMOP President Bob Perls did with Eddy Aragon ÃÂ on Rock of TalkÃÂ 95.9