What chills me most as I sit here at Republican Central is the lack of diversity I see as I simply sit and watch the people – how they express themselves (or don’t), how they dress, their average age and their racial makeup. I’m not saying it’s scientific, but it’s one of my favorite things to do. I think of it as a requirement for getting to know the culture of any place or gathering and it has served me well thus far.
Gray wolves in the Northern Rockies got a break last Friday as they regained endangered species status—thanks to a lawsuit brought by a coalition of environmental organizations, including Sierra Club and Natural Resources Defense Council. The decision comes as environmental groups in New Mexico await a decision on one lawsuit involving the Mexican gray wolf, and continue to pursue two others.
As we move closer to the November election, it amazes me the nerve of Barack and his left-wing supporters and their already revisionist perspective on the war on terror, as well as their continued opposition to protecting Americans and our economy. It is so disgusting that last week on Barack’s world tour -- with stops in such friendly countries as Germany and France -- he couldn’t help bashing our country
Every once in a while when I'm in the car, I'll tune in to the local conservative talk radio station. You know the one - it proudly features Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity and some local equivalents spouting what they call "the truth" all day long.
"You're a great American," says each genuflecting caller who gets through to the self-important Hannity. "No, YOU'RE a great American," confers the host.
And so it is settled, just by saying so.
As a longtime Alaska journalist and resident who knew Gov. Sarah Palin and followed her political rise, I have to wonder what John McCain was thinking when he asked her to be his vice presidential nominee. Sure, she's a lot of things McCain is, was or needs. The 44-year-old is a maverick, a Republican who challenged the Alaska GOP's old-boy network and won. She is a fiscal and social conservative who opposes abortion rights. She's a photogenic former beauty queen with five kids, including one just born with Down syndrome and another in the Army heading to Iraq. She's a commercial salmon fisherman and a moose hunter and her husband races snowmobiles. But is she ready for this job?
Liberals sure have figured out how to use the blogosphere to their advantage. A comment Republican 2nd Congressional District candidate Ed Tinsley made at a recent forum in Las Cruces exploded onto the national stage on Wednesday thanks to their efforts. It’s sure to come back to bite Tinsley in November.
Steve Bell, U.S. Sen. Pete Domenici's chief of staff, had hoped the retiring Republican senator could travel to Las Cruces during his last months in office to celebrate a compromise that had protected hundreds of thousands of acres of land in Doña Ana County. But that won't happen, Bell said in an interview, and he blames the New Mexico Wilderness Alliance for the missed opportunity.
McCain granted an approximately 25-minute interview today to five New Mexico reporters -- including NMI's Heath Haussamen -- who rode with him on the Straight Talk Express, his campaign bus, from the Albuquerque International Airport to a campaign fundraiser at the Hilton Albuquerque.
Republican presidential nominee John McCain has made his choice for VP and it's ... Sarah Palin.
Who?
Palin is the first-term Alaska governor and a 44-year-old conservative Christian and self-described “hockey mom” who has been governor for less than two years, as the New York Times put it in a story published a few minutes ago.
It's a surprise move but McCain's decision comes at a time when his campaign is trying to attract women voters.
Doug Burns at New Mexico Independent's sister publication, the Iowa Independent, predicted McCain's decision to choose Palin two months ago in this prescient column. Check it out.
U.S. Rep. Heather Wilson and other New Mexico veterans joined today in the assault on Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama’s stance on the Iraq War a day after the candidate visited the war-torn nation. Wilson said Obama is “frighteningly inexperienced” on foreign-policy issues.
Having just returned from what will probably be my last legislative session, I have to tell you I was amazed at how well the Democrats can stay on message nationally and locally. We finished a “special session” that was to deal with emergency issues. I was shocked to see that a proposal to give some people a small check had been labeled an “emergency.” This proposal was given the name “tax rebate.” Many people who will receive the so-called rebate actually paid no taxes at all. And many thousands of others paid very little.
In April 2007, just a few months after a hard-fought and ultimately successful battle to ban energy development in northern New Mexico's pristine Valle Vidal, local conservationists were brimming with confidence and had their sights set on another chunk of rugged beauty near the Colorado border. A year later, conservationists are still waiting.
A little-known scholarly tome published 20 years ago by five-term U.S. Rep. Heather Wilson – now a Republican Senate hopeful – examined the right of groups like Yasir Arafat’s PLO to take up arms and fight violently for their national liberation. Back then, she concluded that such a legal right does exist. The question now is does she still.
Laurie Weahkee, the recently elected Democratic Party of New Mexico superdelegate, has decided to throw her influential vote to the presidential candidacy of U.S. Sen. Barack Obama. In a wide-ranging interview with NMI, the long-time Native American activist says that last Tuesday's primary results in North Carolina and Indiana sealed the deal for her. She says she's eager for the party to unite around Obama and begin to focus on presumptive Republican Party presidential nominee Sen. John McCain.
Bring a book, a magazine, anything to keep you occupied June 3. State elections officials expect a high voter turnout for the state primary, which could mean lines. In fact, one official estimates a whopping 70 percent turnout of the state's roughly 875,000 registered Democrats and Republicans. One million paper ballots will be ordered just for contingency sake. The big draw, some party officials speculate, could be the Republican U.S. Senate primary battle. And that would be good for the GOP.
The battle for the Republican nod in the Albuquerque-based 1st Congressional District gets very personal on TV
Political "maverick" John McCain clicked the final piece of the 2008 presidential race into place Thursday with a speech that solidified his acceptance into the mainstream Republican fold. On Thursday night before a jam-packed convention hall, he formally accepted the Republican Party's nomination to run for president of the United States.
You know those controversial leases the State Land Office has been routinely entering into over the past few years? Well, planning work under one was recently completed by Las Cruces developer Philip Philippou and the land is now up for sale. When you crunch the numbers based on the minimum acceptable bids for the parcels, Philippou stands to make several million dollars. The original appraised value of the land was $8,000 per acre, or $1,968,000 given the total of 246 acres up for sale. If the land office receives bids for each of the 13 parcels offered that Philippou did work on, the minimum required bid amounts will total $17,180,000, or $15.2 million over the original appraisal. Philippou will get a majo cut of that.
Benny Shendo Jr. may not have gotten Gov. Bill Richardson's endorsement this week in the 3rd Congressional District race for the Democratic contest. But he got the nod from the Santa Fe Reporter. Yep, the Reporter plugged Shendo despite the furor he caused last week when he implied that front runner Ben Ray Lujan was gay and wasn't being honest with folks. Read the reasons why here.
The Reporter also went for GOP Senate candidate U.S. Rep. Steve Pearce, picking the staunch conservative over his more moderate GOP rival for the Republican Senate nomination -- U.S. Rep. Heather Wilson. The Reporter says Pearce got the nod because Wilson wouldn't sit down for an interview and because of her role in the David Iglesias affair. So Democratic U.S. Rep. Tom Udall having an easier time in the general election with Pearce than with Wilson had nothing to do with it? You sure?.
A Democratic party media consultant received an unauthorized fee of $1 million in 2004 and more than $2 million of the contract that produced thousands of TV and radio ads prominently featuring Vigil-Giron in '04 and '06 can't be accounted for.