[LWVNM Action] The New Mexico Redistricting Process Needs Sunshine

haasesusan haasesusan at gmail.com
Wed Mar 25 14:41:07 MDT 2020


Good work, Dick.  SusanSent from my Verizon, Samsung Galaxy smartphone
-------- Original message --------From: Richard Mason <dickmasonnm at gmail.com> Date: 3/25/20  10:19 AM  (GMT-07:00) To: action at mailman.swcp.com Subject: [LWVNM Action] The New Mexico Redistricting Process Needs Sunshine 

The New Mexico Redistricting Process Needs Sunshine
Letter to the Editor Published in the ABQ Journal March 25, 2020

 

Last week was National Sunshine Week. Initiated in 2005, it
is sponsored by the News Leaders Association and the Reporters Committee for
Freedom of the Press and is meant to promote open government and public access
to information.  

The League of Women Voters of New Mexico believes that one
area of government that would benefit from more sunshine is the redistricting
process that takes place every 10 years following the U.S. census. To that end
the League has launched the Fair Districts for New Mexico Project that now has
over 20 supporting organizations.

New Mexico has a long history of having its redistricting
maps litigated and decided by the courts. From the 1960 redistricting cycle
until 1991, New Mexico was forced to get pre-clearance by the US Department of
Justice to assure that the maps approved by the legislature and the governor
complied with federal standards for fair representation. In 1995, DOJ once
again required pre-clearance after the 1992 amended maps violated the standards.

The 2001 and 2011 redistricting cycles ended up in the courts. The
courts ended up setting the districts and it cost the state more than $6
million in legal costs. More importantly, it cost an additional loss of public confidence in the political
process.

That is why the Fair Districts for New Mexico Project is
requesting that the Legislative Council create a cross-partisan
Redistricting Task Force that would include legislators, public members,
representatives from the Governor’s office and the Secretary of State. The task
force should start meeting in late spring of
2020 and report its recommendations to the relevant legislative interim
committee and to the 2021 Legislature.

New Mexico was one of the last states to create an
independent ethics commission. It should not be one of the last states to
institute reforms that will make the redistricting process fairer and more
transparent.

Richard Mason
Leader of the Fair Districts for New Mexico Project
League of Women Voters of New Mexico


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