Albuquerque Journal

NM GOP leaders slam Oil and Gas Associatio­n

Head of group called Rep. Xochitl Torres Small an energy advocate

- BY DAN MCKAY JOURNAL CAPITOL BUREAU

SANTA FE — Three of New Mexico’s top Republican­s lashed out at the state Oil and Gas Associatio­n in an opinion column this week, exposing a rift between two organizati­ons that normally work well together on state energy policies and politics.

The frustratio­n burst into view after the New Mexico Oil and Gas Associatio­n’s executive director, Ryan Flynn, described U.S. Rep. Xochitl Torres Small last week as a strong advocate for New Mexico’s energy interests and as someone who has “stood up to those in her party who want to completely ban fracking.”

The favorable comments about the New Mexico Democrat, reported by The Associated Press, drew harsh criticism in a column by state Republican Party Chairman Steve

Pearce and the Republican floor leaders in the Legislatur­e, Rep. James Townsend of Artesia and Sen. Stuart Ingle of Portales. The column was published Sunday in the Albuquerqu­e Journal.

The three Republican leaders accused the Oil and Gas Associatio­n of acting as a “political weapon” in the race for the 2nd Congressio­nal District — in which Torres Small faces Republican Yvette Herrell, a former state representa­tive — and levied broader attacks

on the work of Flynn, the group’s executive director.

In an interview Monday, Pearce, a former U.S. representa­tive who worked in the oil industry, said flatly that the associatio­n should fire Flynn and hire someone else. He accused Flynn of falsely painting Torres Small as an ally of oil and gas, and trying to curry favor with people in power.

“Watching the games that get played,” Pearce said Monday, “I felt that we needed to call the associatio­n and Mr. Flynn out.”

Robert McEntyre, a spokesman for the Oil and Gas Associatio­n, said Monday that Flynn’s comments on Torres Small simply reflected the group’s “experience working with her and her office, and her engagement with the oil and gas industry.”

The associatio­n, McEntyre said, is nonpartisa­n and doesn’t endorse candidates.

In a written statement, Flynn said Monday that Torres Small “understand­s the important role that the oil and gas industry plays in New Mexico.”

But he also said Herrell had “demonstrat­ed a favorable record during her service in the Roundhouse” — a reference to her eight years as a state legislator.

Flynn has led the New Mexico Oil and Gas Associatio­n since 2016. He served as environmen­t secretary in the Republican administra­tion of former Gov. Susana Martinez.

The associatio­n lobbies on behalf of the oil and gas industry. It, or an affiliated committee, has made donations over the past year to Republican and Democratic campaigns, including a $25,000 contributi­on to a fund run by House Speaker Brian Egolf, D-Santa Fe, according to state records.

Tense campaign

The race to represent the state’s 2nd Congressio­nal District is expected to be one of the most competitiv­e in the country this year.

Torres Small narrowly won the southern New Mexico district in 2018, defeating Herrell by less than 2 percentage points. The district had been held by Pearce for 14 of the 16 years before that.

In the op-ed published Sunday, the GOP leaders targeted Torres Small, claiming she had voted in favor of a fracking ban.

But the vote cited by the state GOP wasn’t a proposal to ban fracking, and Torres Small has said repeatedly that she would oppose such a ban.

Instead, the vote highlighte­d in the Republican column was a procedural motion considered in February. The motion called for the House to take up a nonbinding resolution to express opposition to any fracking ban by a future president.

Torres Small joined with Democrats to defeat the Republican motion and avoid taking up the measure.

Nonetheles­s, Torres Small has repeatedly expressed opposition to a fracking ban, including legislatio­n proposed by Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York.

“I have consistent­ly spoken out against a ban on fracking,” Torres Small said Monday, “and my record backs that up. Here in southern New Mexico, we know that if we shut down oil and gas today, we’ll have to shut down our schools tomorrow.”

Pearce said his column’s descriptio­n of the vote is fair. The motion, he said, was a way for the minority party — Republican­s, in this case — to move the legislatio­n forward and allow future considerat­ion of the resolution opposing a unilateral ban on fracking.

 ??  ?? Rep. Xochitl Torres Small
Rep. Xochitl Torres Small
 ??  ?? Yvette Herrell
Yvette Herrell

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