Errors of Enchantment

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Keller wins 3rd term despite poor track record: council moves left

12.10.2025

With the results of last night’s election in Albuquerque Keller rolls to victory in his bid for an unprecedented 3rd consecutive term. It looks like Klarissa Peña will narrowly win reelection while Stephanie Tellez overwhelmingly defeated Joshua Neal. While dramatic change was in the offing regardless in that District 1 seat regardless of the result it is another instance of a moderate Democrat (Louie Sanchez) being replaced by a far-left “progressive.”

Thus, Keller is back with a Council that has moved somewhat to the left: 4 generally “right of center” councilors, 4 generally “left of center” with Peña as the swing vote.

Unfortunately, the mayoral election was never a fair fight. With the incumbent mayor receiving $1 million from taxpayers to run for reelection he had a big initial advantage. The public campaign financing system is in dire need of reform.

It is also notable just how difficult it is to win as a moderate/conservative in Albuquerque and New Mexico more generally. Whatever Darren White’s limitations or imperfections might be, Keller’s track record is one of an exploding homeless situation, out-of-control crime, and lagging economic growth relative to neighboring cities like Phoenix and Denver (to name two). Keller has made numerous ill-fated policy decisions like an unnecessary gross receipts tax increase at the outset of his administration and “free” buses, not to mention rampant corruption, but voters seem to not hold well-intentioned liberal politicians accountable for their failures.

 

 

Tipping Point New Mexico episode 767: Hoodies, SNAP Controversy, New Mexico Last in Economic Freedom

12.10.2025

On this week’s Tipping Point conversation Paul and Wally discuss the latest on “hoodie gate” including an ethics complaint from Mayor Keller. 

New Mexico’s political leadership is refusing to assist the Trump Administration in rooting out SNAP fraud. But a recent report from the LFC specifically calls out the need to “New Mexico needs to change program administration to address SNAP error rates and monitor food program outcomes.” Paul and Wally further discuss the problems of these government welfare programs and how the Legislature and Gov. care more about the $1 billion annually spent by the federal government on SNAP in New Mexico than really improving the lives of New Mexicans.

New Mexico has fallen to dead last in economic freedom. Why? What needs to be done? Paul and Wally discuss the latest findings and also the new budget data from LFC which show somewhat slower revenue growth from oil and gas but which remain extremely strong.

New Mexico revenue remains very strong (but explosive growth can’t go on forever)

12.10.2025

New Mexico’s revenue boom driven by growth in the Permian Basin oil and gas production is not coming to an end, but it is slowing a bit. Combined with massive spending growth (80 percent since 2019) and a decline in the price of oil, some legislators are feeling budgetary constraint that they haven’t felt much in the last decade:

Rep. Derrick Lente, D-Sandia Pueblo (the powerful chair of House Tax Committee), said it’s unlikely lawmakers will approve a package of tax cuts or other tax code changes during the 30-day session due to the state’s revenue situation. “While we’ve done a great job, maybe this is not the year to have a tax package discussion,” Lente said.

What kind of job he and the other legislators have done with New Mexico’s finances is up for debate (we don’t share Lente’s view), but with so little emphasis on returning money to taxpayers and diversifying New Mexico’s economy in the BEST years, it is hardly a surprise they don’t see much being done in VERY GOOD years like the one to come.

Will the Legislature’s scarcity mindset result in newfound fiscal restraint? With spending having already grown by 80% under Gov. Lujan Grisham spending growth has already slowed a bit in recent years. Even if the money is not spent it will simply be set aside in the state’s massive and fast-growing sovereign wealth fund for future spending.

RGF in the news on “hoodie-gate”

12.08.2025

The debate and discussion over those yellow sweatshirts emblazoned with the message I ♥ Tim Keller has caused a media frenzy in Albuquerque as the runoff election comes to a conclusion on December 9, 2025. As we have reported RGF simply reported on the situation without revealing our sources and for that we have been targeted by Mayor Keller’s campaign with an ethics complaint.

KOAT Channel 7 did the most indepth story with multiple viewpoints. 

KOB TV did a story as well, but it was much more of a hit piece on the Rio Grande Foundation.

The Albuquerque Journal did multiple stories here and here. 

The Piñon Post also did a nice story. 

Plenty of other news outlets in town and elsewhere have reported on the situation.

Click on the photo below to watch the KOAT story:

OPINION: New Mexico’s economic freedom is now dead last

12.08.2025

The following appeared in the Albuquerque Journal  on December 7, 2025.

In a study published earlier this year, we highlighted the fact that New Mexico was the only state in the U.S. to have lost economic freedom since 1981. We now know that it is worse than we thought.

People are more economically free when they are allowed to make more of their own economic choices; economists measure this freedom by looking at the degree to which government spending, taxation and regulation limits choice.

We relied on data from the Fraser Institute’s Economic Freedom of North America index. Over the last two decades, it has become the most cited and most used measure of state-level economic freedom in the U.S. Like its national-level counterpart, The Economic Freedom of the World, the state index has been used in hundreds of academic studies assessing the effect of economic freedom on a wide variety of measures of economic wellbeing.

These studies find that states and nations with higher levels of economic freedom tend to prosper. They have higher incomes, faster growth and less poverty. And prosperity yields a variety of other salutary outcomes including cleaner environments, higher life satisfaction and more gender equality.

Working within the scope of the rule of law and a system of private property rights, humans tend to voluntarily cooperate together to improve their surroundings and outcomes. Government can play a useful role in enforcing property rights and in ensuring that people are free from fraud and force. But it can also stifle innovation and productivity by consuming wealth and placing too many barriers on workers, consumers, businesses and entrepreneurs.

The latest edition of the Economic Freedom of North America has just been released. And sadly, New Mexico has lost even more ground relative to the other 49 U.S. states. Now, the Land of Enchantment has fallen behind New York and Hawaii to be dead last in the nation.

This should not surprise anyone who follows New Mexico policy. The state has had a massive oil and gas boom in recent years, creating a gusher of tax revenue. But policymakers have done nearly nothing with that revenue to make the state more appealing to investors, workers or businesses.

Since the start of 2025, New Mexico’s oil and gas sovereign wealth fund has leapt in value from $58 billion to $66 billion. The general fund budget has risen 71% during Lujan Grisham’s seven years in office. As a share of statewide personal income, the state’s general consumption expenditures are the highest in the nation. Transfers and subsidies are the third highest. Sales tax revenue is the third highest, and government employment is the second highest. As a share of per capita income, New Mexico’s minimum wage is the second highest in the nation.

Instead of creating and enforcing a level playing field for all New Mexicans, the state’s policymakers have long preferred to lavish privileges on favored firms and industries. Time and again, the state’s film subsidy program, for example, has been found to be a money loser. But they keep throwing good money after bad.

Market pressures have recently forced state policymakers to shift corporate welfare spending from unsustainable boondoggles like Maxeon and Ebon Solar to more economically viable projects like data centers (Project Jupiter in Santa Theresa and Zenith Volts near Roswell). But whether these projects come to fruition or not, corporate welfare is not an efficient, equitable or sustainable strategy for long-term economic development.

Instead, policymakers should focus on improving overall economic conditions by increasing economic freedom for all. While it may be unfashionable to say amid massive budget surpluses and revenue growth, the state needs to restrain spending. It should also reduce taxes, ease regulatory burdens and let the private sector play a larger role in economic development.

The state’s descent to dead last in economic freedom, less free than even New York and California, should be a wake-up call.

Paul Gessing is president of the Rio Grande Foundation in Albuquerque. Matthew Mitchell is a senior fellow in the Center for Human Freedom at the Fraser Institute in Canada. He lives in northern New Mexico.

Keller campaign files desperation ethics complaint over RGF reporting in “sweatshirt-gate”

12.05.2025

All of Albuquerque is talking about the yellow hoodies emblazoned with the simple message I ♥ Tim Keller.

Now, the Keller campaign has filed an ethics complaint against RGF president Paul Gessing for simply reporting on the news and sharing photos and his thoughts on the yellow sweatshirts on this website. 

While the Keller campaign has shown no evidence as to who purchased or distributed the yellow hoodies and there is no actual campaign message on the shirts (like vote for or against Tim Keller), this ethics complaint is just another attempt to stifle journalism and basic free speech.

The words “I Love Tim Keller” is not expressed advocacy, consistent with the magic words test in Buckley v. ValeoThe Buckley ruling from the 1970’s is the most consequential ruling that has put in foundation our campaign finance laws.

Saying the words “I love Tim Keller” does not trigger the magic words test as in Buckley v. Valeo. If the shirts said “I support Tim Keller” or “Defeat Tim Keller,” that would cross into expressed advocacy. Source; Middle Tennessee State University

The Rio Grande Foundation did not purchase the shirts, nor did it distribute the shirts. Simply put, there is no evidence of RGF or Gessing being involved in the caper because we weren’t. We were simply provided photos of the shirts being worn after the fact under a strict pledge of anonymity.

The Keller campaign’s effort to attack the 1st amendment right to free speech and our reporting about critical issues facing our City is sad and reprehensible. 2025-12-05_BOE 08-2025 Daymon Ely

LFC report appears to back Trump Administration on rooting out SNAP fraud/errors

12.05.2025

The Legislative Finance Committee recently issued a report with the extremely dull name of “Stacking of Income Supports.” These are well done reports highlighting New Mexico’s over-dependency on welfare programs and the lack of positive outcomes associated with the explosion of spending on programs like Medicaid and SNAP (food stamps).

Both of these programs are at the heart of current controversies including prospective litigation by New Mexico against the Trump Administration’s efforts to root out fraud in the SNAP program. Here are the LFC’s recent findings:

  • While New Mexico has one of the highest poverty rates in the nation, the state also has one of the largest benefits packages, which theoretically allows many family types to meet their needs.
  • New Mexico’s labor force participation rate has been persistently low and has not meaningfully changed despite cash assistance and other workforce development efforts.
  • The state has tried to minimize the effect of “benefit cliffs” to incentivize increasing earnings by expanding program eligibility, but this may come at the expense of those at lower incomes
  • New Mexico needs to change program administration to address SNAP error rates and monitor food program outcomes.

In the absence of state action (which MAY be in the offing thanks to Republican efforts during the recent special session) it is incumbent on the federal government to root out fraud in the SNAP program which is 100% federally funded. It would seem that an honest judge would recognize the federal interest in ensuring that tax dollars are actually directed to the purposes desired.

From a purely policy perspective while the LFC report dances around the issue a bit the report clearly makes the connection between New Mexico extremely high welfare dependency and its extremely low workforce participation rate. At the Rio Grande Foundation we recommend reducing the generosity of those benefits while also pushing long-overdue reforms of its failing education system.

You can see an image of one of the pages of the report here and click on the image for the full LFC report:

Why won’t NM help feds root out SNAP fraud?

12.04.2025

According to this morning’s Albuquerque Journal (Thursday, December 4, 2025), the Lujan Grisham Administration is planning to fight the Trump Administration in court over basic information relating to SNAP (food stamp) beneficiaries. As the article points out:

  1. SNAP is paid for 100% by the federal government with the states and feds sharing administrative costs;
  2. More than 21% of New Mexicans receive SNAP benefits, that’s more than any other state in the nation by a lot;
  3.  New Mexico’s error rate is the nation’s fourth-highest at 14.6%. The error rate refers to accidental overpayments or underpayments of benefits, but does not include fraud or theft. One recent story in New Mexico media highlighted how SNAP benefits were being used to purchase fentanyl. A second story highlighted a woman who had been on SNAP since the 1990s. Neither one would be included in that 14.6% error rate.

So, is this just another case of New Mexico politicians fighting Trump no matter what? Yes, it certainly seems that way. Of course, it doesn’t hurt that SNAP is “free” money for New Mexico politicians. Since SNAP is 100% federally-funded and pumps a mind blowing $1.03 billion into New Mexico  with few strings attached it is hardly a surprise that New Mexico’s economically-ignorant politicians would consider this “economic development” and fight tooth and nail to keep the money flowing.

At the Rio Grande Foundation we believe that SNAP should be a state, not federal program. The incentives for states like New Mexico to game the system are simply too strong. Hopefully New Mexico loses its lawsuit, but real SNAP reform must come from Congress.

 

Tipping Point NM episode 765: New Mexico’s Federal Dependency, Donor Privacy Fight, Hoodies for the Homeless and more

12.04.2025

New Mexico falls to 50th among US states in latest “Economic Freedom Freedom of North America”

12.04.2025

The Rio Grande Foundation has never seen “eye to eye” with Gov. Lujan Grisham and the leftists in Santa Fe who have failed to improve New Mexico even with the benefit of billions of dollars in oil and gas revenues. And, while these policy differences and failures may seem trivial to some, they have real world negative impacts on everyday New Mexicans in the form of poverty, crime, inequality, and migration.

But, with the annual release of the Canada-based Fraser Institute’s “Economic Freedom of North America 2025” report, at least we can quantify New Mexico’s sad status as the least economically free state in the union. You can see the gory details below, but as page 13 of the 2024 index highlights, New Mexico dropped significantly and saw New York, California, and Hawaii all rise ahead of us. For an even longer perspective you can go back to 1981 to the very first version of the report which highlights that New Mexico hasn’t always been at the very bottom in terms of economic freedom.

RGF and the Fraser Institute undertook a policy brief discussing New Mexico’s decline in economic freedom (not including 2025 data) earlier this year.

Ranked choice will only make Albuquerque elections worse

12.02.2025

As we have previously noted, so-called “progressives” in the City of Albuquerque are licking their chops in expectation that a win by Mayor Keller and two additional left leaning candidates for city council would give them a working majority in city government. One of their many planned schemes is to dump the current runoff election model and bring in “ranked choice” voting as has been done in Santa Fe and Las Cruces.

They even have the temerity to use the $1.6 million cost of the runoff election as a justification.

Of course, ranked choice voting has its own problems which include complexity and possible delays in results. Recently, in the wake of their municipal elections in Santa Fe the article below highlighted how common confusion remains even after eight years.

But, if the $1.6 million runoff costs is a real concern for voters/city council (and it should be) we have plenty of ideas for reforming Albuquerque’s elections:

  1. Eliminate the unfair public financing scheme. Keller was the only mayoral candidate to receive public financing meaning he had access to more than $1 million in taxpayer money for his campaign. This money was not available to other candidates.
  2. The City has numerous community and senior centers around town. Rather than renting storefront space throughout the year for elections that occur only occasionally the City and State should save the $15 million spent annually on rented storefronts and use other existing facilities like existing government buildings for voting.
  3. The runoff election which is at least as important as the original city election has only one week instead of two for in-person early voting. One week is plenty of time for voters to get out to the polls and vote early.
  4. The City should end runoffs and revert back to “winner-takes-all” voting.

RGF continues to fight for donor privacy (this time alongside Goldwater Institute and National Federation of Independent Businesses)

12.01.2025

With help from our friends at the Arizona-based Goldwater Institute the Rio Grande Foundation and the National Federation of Independent Business filed a friend of the court (amicus) brief in a lawsuit that challenges the IRS’s requirement that nonprofit organizations turn over their supporters’ private information as part of their annual paperwork.

The lawsuit, brought by our friends at the Ohio-based Buckeye Institute, builds on the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2021 decision, Americans for Prosperity v. Bonta. In that case, the Court declared that California officials violated the Constitution when they forced nonprofits to turn over their IRS paperwork as a condition of operating in the state, which made donors targets for harassment, intimidation, and even violence. This new lawsuit argues that not only should organizations not have to sacrifice their supporters’ privacy to the state, but they also shouldn’t be required to turn it over to the IRS in the first place.

The IRS has admitted that it doesn’t need the information in question.

Supposedly, the IRS wants the information to ensure that nobody is defrauding the tax-deduction system. But the reality, as the IRS itself has conceded, is that it doesn’t actually use this information in that way. After all, if someone is cheating on his taxes by claiming to have donated to a nonprofit when he hasn’t, the IRS will probably discover this by looking at the taxpayer’s return, not the organization’s.

And the IRS itself says as much. Five years ago, it said it “can obtain sufficient information from other sources” and therefore doesn’t actually need nonprofits to give up this data. And in 2018, it admitted that it “does not need [this information] to be reported.”

As we all know, especially those in “blue” states like New Mexico, donors to nonprofits and political organizations are often targeted for ostracism, intimidation, and even physical attacks. We offer many examples in our brief, but perhaps the most infamous are the attacks on donors to California’s anti-same-sex-marriage ballot initiative, Prop. 8. After that initiative was adopted, donors’ information was posted on an online map so they could be tracked down and targeted—which indeed, many were. Their homes, cars, and even churches were vandalized, and some were subjected to physical attacks.

In our brief, we argue that not only does the disclosure mandate violate the rights of free speech and privacy, but it fails even the most basic requirement of law: that it be rational. Since the IRS admits it doesn’t need the information and that it must spend time and money trying to keep this information under lock and key, the requirement is positively irrational.

You can read our brief in the IRS lawsuit here.

RGF opinion piece: Federal shutdown highlights New Mexico dependence

12.01.2025

The following appeared in the Santa Fe New Mexican on December 1, 2025.

Among other things, the recent federal shutdown highlighted just how dependent New Mexico is on the federal government. According to the website Virtual Capitalist, New Mexico is the most dependent state in the nation on federal dollars.

There are some good reasons for this. Our state has three major Air Force bases plus White Sands testing range. We also have two major national nuclear labs, Los Alamos and Sandia. Forty one percent of our state is managed by the federal government, and a significant portion of that includes tribal lands.

But, as many New Mexicans recently saw for themselves, being reliant on the deeply indebted federal government ($38 trillion at last count) is not a comfortable place to be. New Mexico is not just dependent on Washington to manage its lands and military/national security operations, it is far too reliant on federal welfare programs like Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program and Medicaid.

New Mexico is far and away the most reliant state on SNAP (food stamps) at 21.2% of the population. No other state has as much as 20% of its population on SNAP while neighboring Utah has just 4.8%. Colorado and Texas have less than half as many people by percentage on food stamps.

And then there’s Medicaid, the joint federal/state health care program for the poor. Medicaid which in New Mexico is funded on a 3 to 1 basis by the federal government is considered an “entitlement” and thus was not impacted by the federal shutdown nonetheless poses a huge challenge for New Mexico.

Even if the federal government never shuts down again and somehow the federal government’s massive debt is paid off someday, New Mexicans would be better off not relying so heavily on federal welfare programs. The fact that so many New Mexicans are reliant on these programs points to a failure of the State’s economic policies.

Never has that been truer than now with New Mexico still in the throes of an oil and gas boom that is pumping revenue into the State economy and budgets. According to the latest estimates lawmakers will have another $500 million in “new” money to spend in the upcoming 2026 session. The state is also sitting on $66 billion in funds invested in various sovereign wealth funds. We have the money to do better.

The governor recently called not one but two special sessions of the Legislature to shift the cost of federal health care subsidies and SNAP payments to New Mexicans if the federal government doesn’t keep the cash flowing. Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham has the problem exactly backwards, though.

She’s been in office during seven legislative sessions, all of which saw big oil-and-gas-driven budget surpluses. Over that time span she has done nearly nothing to improve New Mexico’s economy and reduce New Mexico’s over-dependency on federal welfare programs. This is not to say these welfare programs don’t have a purpose. They do, but New Mexico is not a poor state. Its people shouldn’t be poor, either.

A few examples highlight the problem. One is a KOAT news story about a seemingly healthy woman who has been receiving SNAP benefits for a mind-blowing 30 years. She’s been on SNAP since the 1990s and there are likely many like her. Unfortunately, New Mexico has not complied with the Trump Administration’s efforts to root out fraud and abuse in the SNAP program.

While these cases of fraud are problematic and sadly divert resources away from those who need the help, the best solution is to encourage New Mexicans to become productive citizens and to leave dependency behind. It won’t happen quickly and it may not always be easy to lure people out of dependency but doing it will benefit all New Mexicans whether they depend on welfare or not.

Paul Gessing is president of New Mexico’s Rio Grande Foundation. The Rio Grande Foundation is an independent, tax-exempt research and educational organization.

Tipping Point NM episode 764 Ken Miyagishima – Candidate for Governor of New Mexico

11.28.2025

On this week’s interview Paul sits down with former Las Cruces mayor and Democrat for Gov. of New Mexico Ken Miyagishima. Paul and Ken discuss his leadership during COVID as well as the numerous issues facing New Mexico’s next governor including the medical provider shortage, the 2nd amendment, and education reform, and the economy writ large. Ken shares how he would approach each of these issues and more. For more information on Ken’s campaign for Gov. check out his website.

Hundreds of Albuquerque Homeless sporting yellow “I love Tim Keller” sweatshirts

11.28.2025

With early voting starting on Monday for the runoff election between challenger Darren White and incumbent Mayor Tim Keller looking for an unprecedented third consecutive 4 year term, we noticed hundreds of homeless were running around Albuquerque’s “war zone” (with the politically-correct name “International District”) with yellow sweatshirts on.

But these yellow sweatshirts have the unlikely message “I ♡ Tim Keller.” We’re not sure where the homeless were able to get sweatshirts supporting Mayor Keller who has certainly done his “best” to worsen the homeless situation in Albuquerque.  Our favorite photo is of the top-left individual standing next to a burning pile of debris on the sidewalk in front of Renaissance Painting.

Tipping Point NM episode 763: Bregman Proposes Term Limits and Pay for Legislators, NM Roads in the News, Virgin Galactic and more

11.28.2025

The dirt on ABQ City Council candidates Teresa Garcia and Stephanie Tellez

11.28.2025

With early voting for Albuquerque runoff elections starting on Monday, December 1, we believe the following information is extremely important for voters to consider about two of the so-called “progressive” candidates running in Districts 1 and 3.

The following relates to Teresa Garcia (formerly Williams) who is running against incumbent Klraissa Peña  was arrested back in 2015 with the following information and mugshot. The charge was aggravated battery and she seems to have neglected to mention this tidbit to the Albuquerque Journal. Update, Jeffrey Tucker of the Albuquerque Journal has a very good explanation of the situation and why he has retracted his endorsement of Garcia based on her lack of truthfulness.

An equally troubled candidate Stephanie Tellez is running in District 1 (against Joshua Neal). We’re not sure what the occasion for the following photo was, but “Mutha’s Day” is NOT in June.

What’s REALLY at stake in the Mayor’s/City Council races?

11.25.2025

While crime and homelessness along with the City’s “immigrant friendly” policies will undoubtedly be at the top of the agenda for whoever wins the runoff election in Albuquerque set for December 9 (with in-person early voting running the week before), there are other issues that could hinge on the election outcome (mayor’s race combined with city council). Here are a few of the big ones that we see depending on the outcome of the runoff:

  1. Ranked Choice Voting: This arcane and confusing voting tool where votes is a darling of left wing activists who dominate the Democratic Party. We believe that a third Keller term and a more progressive council would likely adopt it with Keller’s blessing.
  2. Plastic bag ban: City Council including Klarissa Peña voted in March of 2022 to overturn the City’s plastic bag ban. These bans have failed elsewhere including New Jersey where plastic consumption rose in the wake of the ban, but a more “progressive” council (in the absence of opponents like Klarissa Peña and Louie Sanchez  will likely work to reinstate such a ban.
  3. “Free” buses: Albuquerque’s “free” buses have been a touchstone for ill-conceived socialist policies across the nation including New York’s Zohran Mamdani. They have also failed miserably. Darren White has said he wishes to eliminate them. A more centrist council would likely be willing to act, Keller and a more “progressive” council won’t.
  4. Taxes and the economy: Within a few months of being elected to his first term in office Mayor Tim Keller signed a $50 million tax increase. Keller had previously claimed he’d have the people decide, but decided against it. White not only opposes tax hikes but says he’d change the City’s charter to ensure that voters ALWAYS have a say on tax hikes. Future tax hikes will hinge on the political composition of city council and this mayor’s race.

These may not be THE hot button issues of the campaign, but they are likely as impactful. Be sure to VOTE! 

 

Details on Albuquerque Runoff Voting

11.24.2025

The importance of the runoff election for the future of the City of Albuquerque cannot be underestimated. The City COULD move significantly to the center with the election of Darren White as mayor combined with council candidates Joshua Neal and Klarissa Peña. The election of so-called “progressive” Keller for a third term along with one or both candidates Telles and Garcia would move the City dramatically to the left. Turnout is THE key to this election. Typically turnout in runoff elections is much less than on Election Day.

Here’s what you need to know:

Election Day is Tuesday, December 9. Early voting which we URGE you to take advantage of will last from Monday, December 1 – Saturday, December 6, 2025
10 a.m. – 7 p.m. Early voting is especially important as we head into the teeth of winter and you just never know what the weather will be like on the 9th of December.

Below is a list of locations for early voting which will ALSO be open on Election Day:

Early Voting Site Addresses

98th & Central Shopping Center
120 98th St NW, 87121
Suite B101 & B102

Andalucia Shopping Center
5600 Coors Blvd NW, 87120
Suite C-5

Bernalillo County Visitor and Cultural Center
6080 Isleta Blvd SW, 87105

Caracol Plaza
12500 Montgomery Blvd NE, 87111
Suite 101

Central Mercado
301 San Pedro Dr SE, 87108
Suites B, C, D, E

Clerk’s Annex
1500 Lomas Blvd NW, 87104
Suite A

Cottonwood West
10131 Coors Blvd NW, 87114
Suite C-02

Daskalos Center
5339 Menaul Blvd NE, 87110

Four Hills Shopping Center
13140 Central Ave SE, 87123
Suite 1420

Holly Plaza
6600 Holly Ave NE, 87113
Suite B-6

Los Altos Plaza
4200 Wyoming Blvd NE, 87111
Suite B-3

Los Ranchos Villa
6601 4th St NW, 87107
Suite U

Petroglyph Plaza
8201 Golf Course Rd NW, 87120
Suite D-1

South Valley Multi-Purpose Senior Center
2008 Larrazolo Rd SW, 87105

The Shoppes at 6001 San Mateo
6001 San Mateo Blvd NE, 87109
Suite B-3

University of New Mexico
Student Union Building, 87106
Louie’s Lounge

West Bluff Center
5211 Ouray Rd NW, 87120
Suite B

 

Bregman touts term limits/pay for New Mexico legislators

11.24.2025

Democrat gubernatorial candidate Sam Bregman has called for term limits and salaries for New Mexico’s Legislature. For the record, we’d support both. Ideally, legislator pay would replace the outrageous legislative pension system thus compensating legislators for their actual work in real time, not their longevity and promises of generous checks for the rest of their lives.

While Bregman MAY be pandering, we’re not opposed to this kind of pandering. But, it is true that the Legislature would have to act to support term limits which is the toughest problem. That’s like letting the chickens vote for Colonel Sanders! While 16 states have legislative term limits a vast majority (perhaps all) were adopted by voters in the form of a ballot initiative, not legislators themselves. New Mexico has no such process in place realistically. So, this is an exceedingly unlikely thing to happen.

But, New Mexico’s legislative body is an abject failure (even relative to the failed MLG administration). It is time for dramatic measures to bring new blood and thinking into the body. Ideally voters would do this themselves in the elections, but they haven’t done a very good job over the years. It is worth having a debate about term limits and broader legislative reforms.

Roads, roads, roads! The Santa Fe New Mexican hits the issue hard

11.24.2025

The Santa Fe New Mexican had a series of articles on roads over the weekend. There was some new information and a lot of info that we already know. Here’s a quick rundown:

The Rio Grande Foundation has outlined a few ways which the Legislature COULD work to improve the roads.

  • Free up some of the unspent $7.2 billion in unspent capital outlay money that is typically used for “pork” projects for roads.
  • Make electric vehicle owners pay a fee for road maintenance (they currently do not).
  • Repeal New Mexico’s “mini” Davis-Bacon law that allows unions rather than market forces to set construction wages.
  • Tax gas “at the rack” to capture gas taxes on tribal lands (they currently do not remit state gas tax).

Like so many of New Mexico’s issues these run up against (in order) the interests of: legislators themselves, environmental groups, unions, and tribes, each of which are core Democrat interest groups. Nonetheless, the condition of our roads is a real drag on New Mexico’s economy (costing motorists $2,074 annually, for vehicle maintenance, congestion and safety costs). This is why they don’t get done and are unlikely to be done unless or until the political winds shift and voters realize what is happening and vote accordingly.

 

Can Virgin Galactic really launch space tourism flights by the end of 2026?

11.21.2025

Virgin Galactic has gone 16 months without a launch. They also haven’t had test flights of their new Delta “spacecraft” which they hope will be financially viable in a way that their original craft was not. Recently Virgin Galactic pledged that they’d be launching by the 4th quarter of 2026, about a year from now.

It is worth the reminder that Virgin Galactic is the flagship tenant at New Mexico’s taxpayer-funded (thanks to then-Gov. Bill Richardson, a Democrat). Advocates for the Spaceport continue to claim the facility is financially viable, but we have serious questions about those calculations. 

Virgin Galactic has often made bold predictions about their launch schedules. As space analyst Doug Messier notes,

Virgin Galactic has been on track to achieve one goal after another since Richard Branson announced plans to fly tourists to space in September 2004. In 21 years the company has seldom met its schedule.

Delays are quite common in big space projects. The problem is Virgin Galactic’s delays have been epic in scale. The company has exhibited a unique brand of excessive optimism coupled with a chronic inability to deliver.

Will Virgin Galactic succeed in returning paying customers to near-space before the end of 2026? We’d bet not. Will the company ever truly make money given the fact that competing private space companies (like Blue Origin) are racing ahead with more and better launches?

Tipping Point NM episode 762 Philip K. Howard – “Saving Can-Do: How to Revive the Spirit of America”

11.21.2025

Are you concerned that America has run out of big ideas and can’t carry big projects (or even basic government programs) to fruition in a successful way? Philip K. Howard is a return guest on Tipping Point NM. Philip and Paul discuss his latest book “Saving Can-Do: How to Revive the Spirit of America.” The book amounts to a critique of overregulation and red tape and outlines ideas for how we can get regulatory bodies and attorneys out of the way of essential government services and projects.

Among Paul’s numerous questions for Philip is to compare his book with the popular book “Abundance” which addresses several similar issues albeit from an explicitly “Democrat” or liberal angle. You don’t want to miss this conversation!