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‘Back to the days of land grabs': NM state lawmakers on alert against sale of public lands
‘Back to the days of land grabs': NM state lawmakers on alert against sale of public lands

Yahoo

time7 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

‘Back to the days of land grabs': NM state lawmakers on alert against sale of public lands

Rep. Patricia Roybal Caballero (D-Albuquerque) attended a watch event for a court hearing in the Yazzie/Martinez education equity case on April 29, 2025. (Photo by Danielle Prokop / Source NM) Even though the Republican tax and spend bill that cleared the United States House of Representatives last month no longer authorizes the sale of thousands acres of public land, state lawmakers in New Mexico say they will continue to monitor how the federal government's actions toward public lands could impact Native nations. As the interim legislative Indian Affairs Committee on Monday planned its work for the rest of 2025 at its first meeting since this year's legislative session, two members said the U.S. government's plan to sell public lands could threaten tribal sovereignty and economic development in New Mexico, which is home to 23 Indigenous nations. Rep. Patricia Roybal Caballero, an enrolled member of the Piro Manso Tiwa Tribe and an Albuquerque Democrat, said she anticipates the federal government's sales of public lands may affect tribal sovereignty, and she wants to know what legal mechanisms are available to the state government to 'push back against those land grabs.' 'I envision us going back to the days of land grabs,' Roybal Caballero said. U.S. Rep. Gabe Vasquez (D-N.M.), who co-founded the Bipartisan Public Lands Caucus earlier this year, last month applauded the removal of a provision in the budget bill that would have authorized the sale of thousands acres of public land in Utah and Nevada. At the time, Mark Allison, executive director of conservation advocacy group New Mexico Wild, said this is the first of many fights in coming days to stave off efforts to privatize public lands. 'The same forces that tried to sneak this land grab through would love nothing more than to come after New Mexico's public lands next time,' he said. NM delegation: Three national monuments could be reduced, eliminated Rep. Charlotte Little, an Albuquerque Democrat from San Felipe Pueblo, said on Monday she wants the committee to receive a report on the impact of the federal government's proposed actions toward the Chaco Canyon and Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks national monuments, and how those actions could also affect economic development in the surrounding areas. New Mexico's federal delegation, led by U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.), in April asked the federal government to leave intact Tent Rocks along with Organ Mountains-Desert Peaks National Monument and Rio Grande del Norte, which they said were 'under consideration for reduction or elimination.' Roybal Caballero also said she wants the committee to discuss issues related to sustainable management of tribal lands including water rights, resource extraction and environmental protection. By the end of the year, the committee is expected to endorse legislation for the 2026 legislative session. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

Constitutional amendment to restore voting rights to incarcerated people passes first committee
Constitutional amendment to restore voting rights to incarcerated people passes first committee

Yahoo

time26-02-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Constitutional amendment to restore voting rights to incarcerated people passes first committee

Rep. Patricia Roybal Caballero (D-Albuquerque) is co-sponsoring legislation that would ask New Mexico voters to amend the State Constitution to remove criminal conviction for a felony as a constitutional restriction on eligibility to register to vote. (Photo by Austin Fisher / Source NM) A proposed amendment to the New Mexico Constitution that would extend the right to vote to people incarcerated in state prisons passed its first legislative hurdle on Wednesday. The House Government, Elections and Indian Affairs Committee voted 5-3 along party lines in favor of House Joint Resolution 10, with Republicans in opposition. HJR 10 would ask New Mexico voters to amend the State Constitution to remove criminal conviction for a felony as a constitutional restriction on eligibility to register to vote. Sponsor Rep. Patricia Roybal Caballero (D-Albuquerque) said HJR10 would affirm New Mexicans' right to participate in democracy. Her expert witness, Selinda Guerrero with Millions for Prisoners New Mexico, said HJR 10 would fulfill the promise of the 15th amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which prohibits the denial of the right to vote based on race, color or previous condition of servitude. 'Black and Indigenous peoples of this land remain significantly disenfranchised due to overcriminalization and lack of polling locations,' Guerrero said. 'Universal suffrage is still at the forefront of one of the most important issues to preserving our democracy and access to the ballot for all people is crucial to fulfilling this promise of democracy.' She said if the constitutional amendment passes, enabling legislation in a future session could specify the creation of polling places in state prisons. Supporters attending the hearing in committee on Wednesday included the American Civil Liberties Union of New Mexico, the Burque Autonomous Brown Berets, Common Cause New Mexico and the League of Women Voters of New Mexico. No opponents attended. Rep. John Block (R-Alamogordo) asked if the sponsors would consider only extending the franchise to people convicted of felonies who get halfway through their prison sentence. Roybal Caballero said they would not, because the legislation's point is to entirely end disenfranchisement. 'If we continue to create divides, then we're defeating the intent and purposes of this piece of legislation,' she said. House Majority Floor Leader Reena Scepanski (D-Santa Fe) said she supports the bill because of the 'tragic history' of people entirely losing the franchise, as opposed to other rights that are only partially taken away if someone commits a crime. 'When you have people in custody, they are completely subject to the control of the state, and so who is more important to have a voice in the leadership of the state than those who are completely at the state's whim?' Scepanski said. Block asked about the 2022 law that restored the right to vote to New Mexicans once they're out of prison. Guerrero said despite that law, county clerks are still denying hundreds of New Mexicans in those circumstances from registering to vote. 'There's unending confusion within state agencies to be clear about who's able to vote and who's not able to vote,' she said. 'We believe this ballot measure will help to remove all of that burden from clerks across the state.' Despite wrongful denials, New Mexico veteran who completed his sentence for a felony finally votes Rep. Martin Zamora (R-Clovis) said allowing people in prison to vote would lead to them getting into arguments over politics, which would disrupt prison security. 'If there's two prisoners in there, and they're passionate about the two different presidents that ran for president of the United States this time, and they get to arguing about it, and they cause a fight or a riot, to me, that can happen if we start doing this,' he said. Rep. Janelle Anyanonu (D-Albuquerque) said political speech is not outlawed in New Mexico's prison system, so the act of filling out a ballot will not cause someone to be violent or increase risk. 'I think passage of this resolution reduces risk and maintains dignity,' she said. Co-sponsor Rep. Pamelya Herndon (D-Albuquerque) said Zamora seemed to overlook the fact that what he's describing is happening both in and outside the prisons, 'so it doesn't make a difference.' 'If they have the right to vote, then they will have the right to participate, like everyone else has the right to participate as citizens of this nation,' Roybal Caballero said. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

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