Errors of Enchantment

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Tipping Point NM episode 805: Assassination Attempt, State Energy Council, Social Studies Standards and more

04.29.2026

RGF calls out City of Albuquerque for wasteful turf spending in KOAT Channel 7 story

04.29.2026

A few years ago the City of Albuquerque spent $235,000 for turf (in Rio Rancho) for the Duke City Gladiators. The team folded and a new arena team by a different name now plays at State owned Tingley Coliseum. What happened to the old turf? Let’s just say it has been “repurposed.” As the City struggles with overspending it is worth highlighting some of the many ways in which wasteful spending has happened.  Check out the story here:

A closer look at the universal childcare suit brought by Governor candidate Duke Rodriguez

04.29.2026

Republican gubernatorial candidate Duke Rodriguez has (so far) successfully challenged the creation by Gov. MLG of her “free” childcare program. You can read various perspectives on the case here. Here’s our take:

Clearly, the Gov.’s actions to institute “free” childcare BEFORE the Legislature created it (she started the program on November 1, 2025 but the Legislature didn’t pass the bill until 2026). The Rio Grande Foundation has consistently opposed taxpayer-funded childcare and has often questioned the Gov.’s ability to act BEFORE the Legislature to implement the program.

So, there is a worthwhile legal question to be answered here. BUT, the Legislature DID ultimately act during the 2026 session. Of course, the Gov. could use the pre-existing childcare program to pressure legislators to NOT change the program in ways that would impact families already receiving it (such as income limits).

And, of course, the ability for future governors to set up a new government program AND THEN demand the Legislature approve it and provide funding is highly problematic and worth the challenge. This IS absolutely a question that should be resolved by the courts. Kudos to Mr. Rodriguez for demanding answers.

The Gov. is right to be defensive. She is used to a compliant media as well as a Legislature and courts that have typically given her what she’s wanted during her 8 years in office. What will happen? We have no idea. The Legislature DID pass this into law, but in many ways they did so thanks to illegal pressure from the Gov. We’ll be watching!

“Washington Monument Syndrome” stall restaurant inspections

04.28.2026

Inspecting restaurants for safety is pretty close to a core function of government. The Environment Department and other parts of New Mexico government are happy to do things that have nothing to do with core government functions, but inspecting restaurants is apparently just too much to ask. It’s called Washington Monument Syndrome. 

KOAT TV and others are reporting that the New Mexico Environment Department has “temporarily suspended routine inspections of restaurants, public pools, and septic systems due to budget constraints, grounding 35 inspectors and raising concerns about safety.”

That’s because while $1.2 million was requested during this year’s legislative session to maintain staff salaries and the inspection program, the funding was not approved.

The department will receive a 9% budget increase for fiscal year 2027, starting July 1, but according to Environmental Health Director William Schaedla, “That 9% doesn’t keep pace with increasing costs. Vehicular costs have gone up. We’re mandated by the state personnel office to provide revisions to health care coverage for the staff.”

It IS worth noting that restaurants have a self-interest in being clean and careful with regard to how they produce and serve food, but  these inspections are still important and simply indicate that GOVERNMENT doesn’t care enough to fund them. As the New Mexico House GOP noted “The Environment Department has seen a 226% general fund budget increase since FY19. That does not include federal funding. Yet it cannot maintain a basic public safety function like food inspections. That points to misallocation, not scarcity.”

It is hard to disagree with them especially when you further consider that under Gov. MLG spending has grown 81% and the state is sitting on more than $70 billion in its permanent funds. But, the politicians who run New Mexico can’t find the money to inspect restaurants.

Recently RGF argued against various fee increases on restaurants (outside of Bernalillo County) and urged our friends and supporters to contact the Environmental Improvement Board (EIB) in opposition. We stand by that effort and believe that the State has more than enough money to do adequate inspections. If the Legislature and Gov. wish to increase fees, they should do that legislatively.

RGF and NM Federalist Society to host Luncheon Speaker on Supreme Court Decision Preview/future Court changes w/ Pacific Legal Foundation’s Anastasia Boden

04.28.2026

Celebrate America250!

Celebrate America250 with us! Sponsor the Rio Grande Foundation’s semi-quincentennial speaker series.

Join the Rio Grande Foundation for this four-part series. Buy your tickets for events now!

GET TICKETS

Anastasia Boden is Constitutional Scholarship Director and Senior Legal Analyst at Pacific Legal Foundation. where she leads the organization’s Supreme Court commentary and directs scholarly analysis in support of the firm’s litigation. She has represented entrepreneurs and small businesses nationwide in challenges to onerous licensing regimes, anti-competitive titling restrictions, Certificate of Need (“competitor’s veto”) laws, and other forms of unnecessary red tape that block economic opportunity.

Anastasia will be discussing the upcoming US Supreme Court decisions and other potential developments on the Court, including, but by no means limited to, potential retirements of stalwart conservative Justices Thomas and Alito.

Luncheon event is in Albuquerque on Wednesday, June 3, 2026. Click Get Tickets for further details and to purchase your seat today. Cancellation policy: Need to cancel? Cancellations will be honored until May 4, 2026 at 12:00PM MDT, minus a 10% transaction fee. Luncheon location is Indian Pueblo Cultural Center located at 2401 12th Street NW in Albuquerque, New Mexico 87104.

Pacific Legal Foundation is a public interest law firm that defends Americans’ liberties when threatened by government overreach and abuse. This event is being cosponsored by the New Mexico Federalist Society.

Don’t miss this exciting and informational event!

Labor/overtly socialist groups to rally on May Day: Albuquerque Teacher Federation (and others) join Party of Socialism and Liberation, others

04.28.2026

Somehow we at the Rio Grande Foundation received a press release from a bunch of labor and socialist groups that are planning Mayday celebrations here in Albuquerque. Mayday is both International Workers’ Day and Communist/Socialist Solidarity Day. Typically it was always a big deal in communist countries like the USSR but it was not widely celebrated in the United States. Labor Day has always been celebrated in September instead.

With Americans (especially young people) growing more supportive of socialism as the horrors of communism fade in people’s memories, on the (mainstream) political left organizations that would perhaps have distanced themselves from support of outright socialism now seem willing to hop aboard alongside overtly socialist groups. The following is the list of co-sponsors of Albuquerque’s Mayday rally as shared with us from organizers of the Mayday event to be held at Civic Plaza.

 

CO-SPONSORS:

Albuquerque Democratic Socialists of America
Albuquerque Federation of Classified Professionals Local 4129
Albuquerque Protest Drummers
Albuquerque Teacher Federation
Alliance for Retired Americans
American Federation of Teachers New Mexico
American Federation State County Municipal Employees Council 18
American Friends Service Committee
Center for Civic Policy
Central New Mexico Labor Council
Common Cause New Mexico
Communication Workers of America Local 7076
Indivisible Albuquerque
International Association of Firefighters Local 244
International Union of Painters and Allied Trades District Council 36
Ironworkers Local 495
Jewish Voice for Peace
Laborers International Union of North American Local 16
La Raza Unida
Party of Socialism and Liberation
Progress Now New Mexico
National Education Association of New Mexico
New Mexico Caregiver’s Coalition
New Mexico Dream Team
New Mexico Immigrant Law Center
New Mexico Federation of Labor
New Mexico Professional Firefighters Association
New Mexico Working Families Party
Organized Power in Numbers
Organizing in the Land of Enchantment
Sheetmetal Workers Local 49
Southwest Coalition for Palestine
Starbucks New Mexico Workers United
Teamsters Local 492
The Semilla Project
United Academic of University of New Mexico Local 6662
United Association Local 412
Union of Graduate Workers  of New Mexico Local 1466
Women’s March

 

Sen. Ben Ray Lujan: strong supporter of automobile “kill switch”

04.27.2026

There has suddenly been an upsurge in online discussion over the automotive “kill switches” that some manufacturers are putting into new cars. See post and video below. While ALL Democrats including NM’s congressional delegation (and some Republicans) in Congress voted to allow these “kill switches” (allowing the vehicle to be remotely disabled) Sen. Ben Ray Lujan was a particularly strident supporter. This site discussed it at the time and Rio Grande Foundation submitted public comment while Piñon Post also covered it at the time. Sadly, things are continuing to move in the direction of greater restrictions on your freedom.

 

New Mexico climbing up national rankings for preschool access: but does it matter?

04.27.2026

New Mexico is climbing up the national rankings for preschool access, according to a new report from the National Institute for Early Education Research. New Mexico ranks seventh for access for 3-year-olds and 11th for 4-year-olds during the 2024-25 school year. The state also ranks fifth for state spending, at $13,761 per kid in 2024-25.

Prior to the recent debate over “free” childcare New Mexico had already set up “free” universal pre-K. But, we all know none of this is free. According to the report New Mexico spent $226,084,608 on pre-K, up $9,246,573 from the previous year (that’s a . In all, 16,429 children are enrolled.

We are told of all the positives associated with pre-K, but quite frankly haven’t seen them show up in the data. Although it only became “universal” in the past few years New Mexico has had the program since 2005 and we haven’t seen any good random selection double blind studies showing that pre-K has done much to improve outcomes for New Mexico children.

 

Opinion piece: New Mexico should take advantage of federal education tax credit

04.24.2026

The following appeared in the Santa Fe New Mexican on April 24, 2026.

I read state Rep. Raymundo Lara’s recent article in The New Mexican with disbelief (“N.M. should reject ‘education freedom’ farce,” My View, April 10). In it, Lara argues against New Mexico’s participation in a federal school choice program created by Congress that offers taxpayers a $1,700 credit for donations made to provide “school choice” but also tutoring and special education services, educational therapies, and online materials.

In other words, this is a program that costs New Mexico taxpayers nothing and will aid all schools in New Mexico: public, private and charters. As part of the federal law, governors have the final say over whether their states participate in the program or not.

Ultimately, if New Mexico does not participate in the program, the money New Mexico taxpayers set aside when they take the credit will flow to organizations in other states.

I am on the board of the Rio Grande Foundation, which has been very active in pushing Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham to sign on to the tax credit. After initially saying she would not have New Mexico participate, the governor has since insisted she’ll decide once the regulations are written. That could take some time, but ultimately, she’ll need to make a final decision before leaving office.

My view is that New Mexico kids are suffering in the worst schools in the nation. For two cycles of the Nation’s Report Card or National Assessment of Educational Progress, New Mexico students have been ranked at the very bottom in both math and reading. The status quo is not working, and the $1,700 credit would be a lifeline for New Mexico families.

Without further ado, here are a few of Lara’s lame arguments for not taking the money:

  • We don’t want “a fragmented system where funding is driven by individual preference rather than student need.” Individual preference is what our society is based on. We’d argue that it is a lack of individual preference driven by institutional and political loyalties that have hindered New Mexico students for years.
  • “In New Mexico, we have worked deliberately to build a funding system that prioritizes fairness.” Fairness is fine, but when it becomes access to a “one-size-fits-all” system that is clearly not working, “fairness” in failure is simply not enough.
  • “They (public schools) are accountable to the communities they serve. How so?” The Yazzie v. Martinez case was decided because New Mexico’s schools were considered “inadequate.” The “solution” was to pour more money into the very schools that weren’t getting the job done in the first place.

In summary, the arguments for participating in the federal education tax credit program are much more compelling than the arguments for sitting it out.

It’s “free” money that can be used for a variety of educational purposes including traditional public schools and schools of choice. My granddaughter will be graduating from high school in May, and she said her school is inadequately funded and many needs are unmet. Our education system should be focused on the children who need to be educated, and New Mexico’s children desperately need the system to improve.

We all want fairness, but the most unfair thing would be for tax dollars generated here in New Mexico to flow to participating states like Colorado or Texas.

Let’s provide our children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren with the opportunity to succeed in life through a better education. This federal school choice program will do exactly that for our future New Mexico leaders. Invest in their future now.

Harry Montoya is a former member of the Pojoaque school board and a Santa Fe County commissioner.

New report highlights left wing indoctrination from Southern Poverty Law Center (& others) in NM schools

04.23.2026

The headline of this report “New Mexico education documents for high school history and ethnic studies include climate change, intersectionality, and ‘January 6 insurrection’” offers a brutal takedown of the left wing indoctrination going on in New Mexico schools.

The report summary states “The New Mexico Public Education Department’s (NMPED) Instructional Scope (NMIS) documents for High School History and Ethnic studies feature content such as climate change, gender identity, intersectionality, power and privilege, the “Israeli-Palestinian conflict,” the “January 6 insurrection,” and leftwing groups such as Black Lives Matter, the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), GLAAD, and Sunrise Movement. The NMIS also focuses on social justice movements including the “2020 racial justice protests,” “#MeToo movement,” and Indigenous Environmentalism.

You can bet that none of what is happening in New Mexico classrooms involves a critical analysis of each of these issues. The recently-discredited SPLC is hardly the kind of organization one should be studying in high school except as a case study of a scam. The same can be said for numerous other groups cited in the report.

Back during the time between 2021-2023 the Rio Grande Foundation testified and worked to get our fellow New Mexicans engaged in the fight against these “woke” standards. Others did the same. But, Gov. MLG wanted them and rammed them through.

Don’t worry, New Mexico is still 52nd in education and has the lowest literacy rate in the nation, but we are pleased to report that the students ARE being duly indoctrinated in left wing agendas. It also happens to be the 250th celebration of the American Founding. Sadly, George Washington and Thomas Jefferson don’t seem to play a role in these standards at all.

 

Lujan Grisham unveils “State Energy Council” to study electricity cost, reliability issues

04.23.2026

In a classic case of creating a problem only to now be concerned about the fallout of that problem, according to the Albuquerque Journal Gov. MLG has created a state energy council to study cost, reliability issues involved in New Mexico’s electricity grid. Furthermore, according to the article, “The 13-member council, which includes Cabinet secretaries and industry executives, will be tasked with studying how the state’s electrical grid can be updated while protecting ratepayers from cost increases.” As the Journal noted, “New Mexicans (are) facing rising electricity rates.”

This is exactly the opposite of what supporters promised from the ETA. The Gov. and numerous environmental groups claimed at the time and continue to claim that New Mexicans would benefit from lower costs.

If the Council doesn’t begin and end with a discussion of repealing the Gov.’s “Energy Transition Act” (ETA) of 2019 then it really isn’t worth convening in the first place. In fact, the Council should simply gather, pass a resolution stating that the Legislature should repeal the ETA and bring both natural gas AND nuclear into New Mexico’s long-term electricity mix (these two sources are not supported by the Act which mandates 80% renewable energy by 2040 and  100% zero carbon resources by 2045 for traditional utilities like PNM.

Until 2024 PNM had leases with Palo Verde nuclear plant in Arizona. Those agreements were ended thanks to the ETA in favor of solar and batteries.

The Rio Grande Foundation opposed and worked to stop the Energy Transition Act back and 2019 and we have continued to oppose it while calling out reliability and cost concerns. If we could make one other recommendation to the Gov. and this Council San Juan County where the San Juan Generating Station was (until recently) located would be a great location for a few natural gas plants.

 

 

Tipping Point NM episode 803: Declines in K-12 Enrollment, Dow Back on the Ballot, NM Supreme Court Allows ICE Contract to Proceed and more

04.22.2026

Bid out for new school in San Jon, NM: $40 million with total enrollment of about 120 students

04.21.2026

The Rio Grande Foundation has been highlighting the challenge facing New Mexico with regard to the State’s loss of young people. The largest district (APS) has lost 27,000 students in the past 15 years. If the situation is bad in urban areas one can only imagine what rural communities are dealing with. We only need to look as far as San Jon’s planned new school building for details. San Jon is on the Texas border off I-40.

According to the article linked above the District is currently looking to build a brand new 55,000 sq ft school building for District’s 112 students from prekindergarten through 12th grade. This is obviously an extremely rural community with very little in the way of population or jobs. Notably, the article notes that the District went from 117 students last year to 112 this year. That may sound like a trivial decline, but it is a drop of 4.7% in a single year. We found data from 2014-2015 showing the district had a student population of 145. That’s a 23% drop in 11 years.

This is NOT to “pick on” San Jon schools or even to say that they shouldn’t have a new building. Of course, one wonders why New Mexico needs 89 school districts (not including charter schools). The fact that the money for this project is coming from the State, not local resources is one serious issue. As long as local districts receive such subsidies from the state (courtesy of the oil and gas industry) they don’t need to concern themselves with building a local economy to pay for things like schools.

Usually this is the point where we propose some solutions, but it’s not an easy situation.

  • New Mexico clearly has too many school districts;
  • Our student population is plummeting especially in the non-oil and gas rural areas;
  • Our education funding formula and concentration of $$ in Santa Fe creates political incentives to
  • Our school construction costs are very expensive due to everything from lack of modular building plans to LEED design and Davis-Bacon rules;
  • Innovative solutions are necessary, but New Mexico’s politicians have no interest in addressing the situation when oil and gas money keeps flowing.

 

Las Cruces joins Albuquerque in facing a budget deficit

04.20.2026

After years of overspending the City of Las Cruces, like Albuquerque, faces a budget deficit. There is a lot to unpack with the situation in Las Cruces. For starters, unlike Albuquerque which has lost people, Las Cruces continues to grow and has seen a 7.08% increase since the 2020 census. That means that the City can and should be able to grow its budget albeit at a reasonable and steady pace. Unfortunately, it looks like the City has overshot the mark:

  • FY24: The city approved a $519 million budget, which at the time was the largest in city history, with a 9.4% increase in the general fund.
  • FY25: The city adopted a $596 million budget that added 21 new positions and increased personnel spending by $10.2 million.
  • The FY 26 budget was $612.2 million.

In other words, in just the span of three years Las Cruces spending rose by 18%. 

The good news is that tax hikes do not seem to be part of the conversation at this point. 

While cities should definitely be more financially responsible, it is also true that Albuquerque and Las Cruces don’t benefit in the same way as the State does from New Mexico’s oil and gas boom. There HAS to be a way for the State to leverage some of the piles of cash it has to push cities to go along with much-needed reforms to the State’s broken and anti-business gross receipts tax. Some of us remember in 2023 when bipartisan reform legislation with MLG’s support was killed due to lobbying from cities that would have taken a trivial budget cut from lost GRT revenues in the proposed reform. A governor and legislature that cared about making needed tax reforms to grow New Mexico economically would prioritize innovative ways to bring these and the rest of New Mexico’s cities on board with needed tax reforms.

Report: New Mexico to see dramatic decline in student enrollment

04.20.2026

While New Mexico continues to spend more every year on K-12 education we have documented the fact that the number of kids being educated in New Mexico’s largest district and the state as a whole have been plummeting.  But, as we also noted, this trend of declining numbers of children/youth is only getting started. And, while demography is going to be a serious challenge throughout developed economies worldwide, the reality here in the United States is that population shifts are not distributed evenly.

In fact, despite great weather and being located in the American Southwest (a fast growing part of the US), according to a new report from Bellwether, New Mexico is going to see the 3rd-steepest decline in its K-12 population between now and FY 2031. With a projected drop of 15.1 percent New Mexico’s student population decline trails only deep blue (politically) states Hawaii and California.

Other neighboring states (with the exception of Colorado) are either growing or holding steady in terms of the number of young people. But, the steep drop in New Mexico’s youth population has not elicited much of a response at all from the media or the State’s political leadership.

  1. New Mexico’s education spending both per-pupil and in real terms has grown even while the student population has declined. How much more will New Mexico spend on K-12 at a time of declining enrollment?
  2. Under the current Gov. the State has embraced “free” childcare, “free” pre-K, and “free” college. Will any of these “move the needle” in terms of the number of students?
  3. While population trends  overall are heading down, why is New Mexico seeing such stark declines? What policies could actually move the needle?

 

NM Supreme Court unanimously allows Otero County ICE contract

04.17.2026

Yesterday, the New Mexico Supreme Court decided that HB 9 the so-called “Immigrant Safety Act” which passed during the last legislative session, cannot be used to prevent the agreement between Otero County and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). The law, which goes into effect May 20 states, “A public body that is a party to an existing agreement that is used to detain individuals for federal civil immigration violations shall, upon the effective date of the Immigrant Safety Act, terminate the agreement upon the earliest date permissible under the terms of the agreement, with respect to all provisions that relate to the detention of individuals for federal civil immigration violations.”

  1. You can bet that AG Raul Torrez is going to attempt to find a way to argue that “the earliest date permissible” is May 20.
  2. The order was issued summarily, without explanation meaning that the legal arguments backing their decision were not outlined. But, it would seem that the law’s effective date (which won’t happen for another month) is critical.

The point is that this legal saga is by no means over. Even though these facilities employ 1,000 New Mexicans and have significant implications for local/state economies this is such a hot-button issue for Democrats that it is unlikely the AG and other Democrats will simply give up. Keep an eye out come May 20. More details from the Santa Fe New Mexican.

 

 

Is Bernalillo County Assessor Damian Lara Selling Himself with Taxpayer Dollars?

04.17.2026

County Assessor is usually a pretty obscure elected office. Do you know your county assessor’s name without checking? Being that the individual is in charge of assessing and collecting property taxes it is not a great springboard to higher office.

But the current Assessor Damian Lara seems to be trying and he’s not shy about using taxpayer dollars to raise his profile. See the Albuquerque Journal (April 16, 2026) edition below. Along with Lara’s smiling face he touts various property tax exemptions that you may be eligible for. In some billboards and other advertisements around town he always has his photo prominently displayed. Some of them make it seem (they allude, but don’t necessarily state) that Lara is the one responsible for these tax breaks (the Legislature is the one responsible). It may not be illegal for elected officials to display their face and name prominently on taxpayer-funded information, but it is definitely questionable. We are working to find out how much and from what pool of money he has accessed funds for these advertisements.

Even notoriously corrupt former Gov. Bill Richardson had the decency NOT to include his picture on those (GRIP) Governor Richardson Investment Project) road signs back in his day. 

Lara has certainly not been shy about advancing his policy agenda. He just developed a new policy forcing certain owners of AirBnB’s to pay higher taxes.  He’s also imposed higher tax rates on vacant commercial properties as a stick to push for the owner to sell or occupy the property.

You can go to the Assessor’s website which includes an AI chatbot with Lara offering to answer questions. The website includes a link to “Click to see the Assessor’s tax savings programs” which as noted above would lead many readers to believe that HE is the one providing the tax breaks.

Tipping Point NM episode 802: Jacob Smith, activist and independent candidate for Governor of New Mexico

04.16.2026

On this week’s show Paul sits down with activist and independent candidate for Gov. Jacob Smith. Jacob was active in fighting anti-gun legislation (SB 17) in the 2026 legislative session. We discuss his activism, his plans for New Mexico, and why he’s running as an independent. Check out this great conversation!

Find Jacob’s campaign website here: https://www.smithfornm.com/

You can find his Twitter account here: @GovernToChange

NM ranks 35th in Rich States, Poor States Report

04.16.2026

The folks at American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) do an annual report called “Rich States, Poor States” in which they rank a number of economic policy factors as seen above. On the plus side New Mexico doesn’t rank dead last as it so often does. At a ranking of 35th we are definitely towards the bottom, but not as bad as usual.

On the flip side, New Mexico lags its neighbors by quite a bit in the rankings. Arizona is 5th, Utah 1, Colorado 29, Oklahoma 8th, and Texas is 13th. New Mexico lags behind at 35th. 

Finally, the following chart which was produced by RGF. Since a #1 ranking is better than 50th, it is better to be lower than higher on the chart below. New Mexico’s overall ranking has been rather stagnant in the 30s over the years.

 

 

Update from Virgin Galactic: they still claim they plan to resume flights by year-end

04.15.2026

It has been awhile since anything of importance happened with Virgin Galactic at Spaceport America. Back in August we discussed what we believe to be a deeply flawed economic “study” of the facility’s economic impact, but the company last launched on June 8, 2024 and we have been waiting for the company to resume its space tourism flights out of their taxpayer-funded New Mexico facility ever since.

Well, according to USA Today, the company is still planning to launch this year. (we have our doubts, but only time will tell). According to the article:

Virgin Galactic still expects to resume its space tourism operations by the end of 2026 as it looks to begin ground testing for its new spaceplane in April.

The commercial suborbital spaceflight company founded by billionaire Richard Branson hasn’t conducted a mission taking civilians to the edge of space in nearly two years. But in a recent earnings call, company leaders indicated that plans remain on track to resume those operations later this year now that its new suborbital spaceplane is in the final stages of assembly in Phoenix, Arizona.

Up next? testing from the ground before transitioning to the flight test phase in New Mexico.

Will the company really be able to go from ground testing to flight test and ultimately manned launches within the span of 8 months? They have certainly not hit ambitious targets like this one over the years. Time will tell, but this is one of MANY examples where New Mexico politicians have chased some BIG economic development dream by throwing tax dollars at it rather than making necessary reforms to make New Mexico a more attractive place to do business. The Spaceport and so many other big-spending policies/projects have either failed completely or had at best limited success.

 

Tipping Point NM episode 801: New Report Finds New Mexico Disaster for Families, UNM Offers Bad Bunny Class, ABQ Budget and more

04.15.2026

A look at New Mexico’s rail plans: is an extension of the Rail Runner in the cards?

04.14.2026

KOB TV recently covered New Mexico’s plans for rail over the next 20 years. Along with that plan, Colorado’s Gov. Jared Polis announced a new “front range” passenger rail system that will connect Denver as far south as Trinidad.

So, the question is: What is New Mexico planning to do and how much is it going to cost? After all, far left Democrat Sen. Bill Soules has been pushing for high speed rail from Denver to Mexico (crossing NM North to South). This despite the fact that New Mexico’s current passenger rail system (the Railrunner) has seen ridership collapse and emits more CO2 than driving a car.

The good news is that New Mexico has no plans to join Colorado’s passenger rail plans. Also, the Rail Runner is not being considered for expansion though a Las Cruces/El Paso passenger line is at least discussed. That would certainly not be cheap but it is a long way from serious planning.

Perhaps more exciting and interesting is the plans for freight rail. Currently plans for (separate) rail spurs to San Juan and Lea counties are being considered as well as for the Santa Teresa border crossing. Those are all reasonable ways to build New Mexico’s transportation network. A spur to Spaceport America seems a bit wild considering the lack of action at that facility from the largest tenant Virgin Galactic.

Check out the full story here:

Understanding spending and its growth under Gov. MLG

04.13.2026

A policy blogger named Maria Davidson recently started posting a series of charts contrasting the growth in state spending vs the growth in the same state’s population over the past decade (one for California is linked). I asked for a New Mexico version of her chart, but none was forthcoming, so I made my own. But then I realized that growth over the past decade isn’t nearly as interesting as growth under the current Gov. MLG, so here we are.

But first we have to define what state spending actually means and it isn’t JUST the FY 2027 General Fund budget of $11.1 billion which has grown by 81% under the current Gov. However, with the oil and gas driven growth of New Mexico’s permanent funds and continued reliance on federal spending, New Mexico’s total budget is MUCH bigger than just the general fund.

How big? According to the National Association of State Budget Officers (NASBO), in FY 2019 MLG’s first budget was a robust $19.5 billion. That already large number has grown to $29.7 billion under MLG’s FY 2025 budget. In other words, New Mexico’s total spending has grown 52% under Lujan Grisham (excluding the last two fiscal years). See below

How’s New Mexico’s population doing? In 2019 using simple google searches it was 2,096,829. As of 2025 that number had grown to 2,136,838. That’s total growth of just 2.48%. Needless to say, New Mexico’s budget has grown massively under the current administration fueled by oil and gas revenues. This number will likely continue to grow rapidly in the years ahead driven partially by state expenditures from the permanent funds for pre-K and state-funded “free” childcare.

You can see the chart along with source data on both below: