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The New Mexico Independent going forward

By | 11.16.11

I am writing today to announce the closure of the New Mexico Independent. After three and a half years of operation in New Mexico, the board of the American Independent News Network, has decided to shift publication of its news…

EIB hears more anti-cap-and-trade testimony

Mesa Verde 80
By | 11.10.11

While environmental activists played their part yesterday during demonstrations at the capitol building, going so far as to dress up as solar panels and to sing the tune of “You Are My Sunshine,” their counterparts, the anti-cap-and-trade contingency who has…

New Mexico’s largest university low in popularity

jobs-80
By | 11.10.11

Roughly one quarter of University of New Mexico students are unimpressed with the state’s flagship public school, according to a survey that questioned college students about their higher education experiences.

NYT: The son (and nephew) also rises

By | 06.05.08 | 10:47 am

The national media spotlight that has been shining on New Mexico politics this week found the Santa Fe home of former Kennedy Interior Secretary Stewart Udall, who chatted with the New York Times’ Timothy Egan about his family’s conservation legacy and the political rise of his son and nephew. Both are sitting Democratic congressmen seeking U.S. Senate seats, and both have good shots at winning, Egan writes. Udall’s son Tom is battling Rep. Steve Pearce for Sen. Pete Domenici’s long-held seat. And Colorado Rep. Mark Udall is a "slight favorite" in his bid to replace another retiring senator, Republican Wayne Allard.

 

Two new Democratic senators — first cousins from a family that dates to early Mormon settlers in the Southwest — does not an earthquake make. But New Mexico also has three open Congressional seats, and the presidential campaigns will spend a lot of time here in the Land of Enchantment as well.

 

If the West does prove to be the gateway to the presidency this year — with at least three purple states in play — the campaigns could do no better than to look at polyglot New Mexico.

 

Egan notes the conservation credentials of the Udall cousins and suggests that a western Demoratic resurgence, rooted in the Udall legacy, is on the horizon.

 

Not so long ago, when Western Democrats wanted to caucus, “it was sometimes my cousin Tom and I having a beer,” Mark Udall told Outside Magazine. Now Democrats are poised to own the West, or so goes the heady talk here at 7,000 feet.

Mountain Democrats found their way in part by rejecting the excesses of coastal Democrats, and by looking at what worked for their elders, like Stewart Udall and his brother, the late Morris Udall. The Udall name is written deep into the salmon-colored canyons and mesas of the Southwest, as prominent as a petroglyph.

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Categories & Tags: 2008 Elections| Environment/Energy|