Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

SOME HARD TRUTHS & THE BIG LIE

Building anger in red parts of blue New Mexico sparks mini-rebellion that some fear could be start of nationwide effort to sow chaos around voting ahead of 2024 presidenti­al election

- BY MORGAN LEE

SANTA FE, N.M. — Behind the raw public frustratio­n and anger over election security that has played out this week in New Mexico was a hint of something deeper -- a growing divide between the state’s Democratic power structure and conservati­ve rural residents who feel their way of life is under attack.

In Otero County, where the crisis over certifying the state’s June 7 primary election began, County Commission­er Vickie Marquardt struck a defiant tone as she relented under pressure from the state’s Democratic attorney general, Democratic secretary of state and a state Supreme Court dominated by Democratic appointees.

One of the main explanatio­ns she gave for reversing course had nothing to do with questions over the security of voting machines — the reason the all-Republican, threemembe­r commission had originally refused to certify its election.

“If we get removed from office, nobody is going to be here fighting for the ranchers, and that’s where our fight should be right now,” said Marquardt, the commission chairwoman in a county where former President Donald Trump won nearly 62% of the vote in 2020.

Otero County is similar to the handful of other New Mexico counties where residents have questioned the accuracy of election results and given voice to unfounded conspiracy theories about voting systems that have rippled across the country since former President Donald Trump lost re-election in 2020.

In the state’s vast, rural stretches, frustratio­n over voting and political representa­tion has been building for years. Residents have felt marginaliz­ed and overrun by government decisions that have placed limits on livelihood­s — curtailing access to water for livestock, shrinking the amount of forest land available for grazing, or halting timber operations and energy developmen­ts due to endangered species concerns.

Tensions have mounted as Democrats in New Mexico consolidat­e control over every statewide office and the Supreme Court. Democrats have dominated the Legislatur­e for generation­s.

Even as they voted to certify their elections, sometimes reluctantl­y, commission­ers from several New Mexico counties said they were bound by the law to take that step — thanks to legislatio­n passed by Democrats. They urged their residents to take the fight to the statehouse.

Some bemoaned what they felt was an encroachme­nt by the state on the powers of local government. Marquardt, from Otero County, complained of her commission’s meager “rubber stamping” authority under laws enacted by Democrats and an election certificat­ion “railroaded” through by larger forces.

Otero County is among more than a dozen self-proclaimed 2nd Amendment “sanctuary” counties in rural New Mexico to approve defiant resolution­s against recent state gun control laws. The county also has embraced resistance to President Joe Biden’s goals for conservati­on of more private land and waterways for natural habitat, arguing it will cordon off already limited private land.

Amid alienation, skepticism about the security of elections has taken flight.

On Friday, Otero County Commission­er Couy Griffin was the lone dissenting vote in the election certificat­ion, though he acknowledg­ed that he had no evidence of problems or factual basis for questionin­g the results of the election. His vote came after the county elections clerk said the primary went off without a hitch and that the results were confirmed afterward.

The co-founder of Cowboys for Trump dialed into the meeting because he was in Washington, D.C., where hours before he had been sentenced for entering restricted U.S. Capitol grounds during the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrecti­on.

Applause rang out when Griffin declared, “I think we need to hold our ground.”

The developmen­ts in New Mexico can be traced to far-right conspiracy theories over voting machines that have spread across the country over the past two years. Various Trump allies have claimed that Dominion voting systems had somehow been manipulate­d as part of an elaborate scheme to steal the election, which Biden won.

There has been no evidence of widespread fraud that would have changed the results of the 2020 presidenti­al election, and testimony before the congressio­nal committee investigat­ing the insurrecti­on has made clear that many in Trump’s inner circle told him the same as he schemed to retain power.

The election clash that erupted this past week worries Dian Burwell, a registered independen­t and coffee shop manager in the Otero County seat of Alamogordo.

“We want people to vote and when they see all this, they’ll just say, ‘Why bother?’” Burwell said.

Despite New Mexico counties’ eventual votes to certify their primary results, election officials and experts fear the mini-rebellion is just the start of efforts nationwide to sow chaos around voting and vote-counting, building toward the 2024 presidenti­al election. The New Mexico secretary of state’s office said it had been inundated with calls from officials around the country concerned that certificat­ion controvers­ies will become a new front in the attacks on democratic norms.

In another New Mexico county where residents angrily denounced the certificat­ion, commission­ers were denounced as “cowards and traitors” by a hostile crowd before voting. Torrance County Commission­er LeRoy Candelaria, a Republican and Vietnam veteran, voted to certify the results without apologies, despite the personal insults.

The semi-retired rancher and highway maintenanc­e foreman said he has taken time outside commission meetings to explain his position that New Mexico’s vote-counting machines are well-tested and monitored.

“Our county clerk did an excellent job. I don’t think there’s a vote that went wrong in any way,” Candelaria said later in a telephone interview. “My personal opinion is there are people who are still mad about the last presidenti­al election . ... Let’s worry about the next election and not take things personally.”

 ?? ?? Gun rights advocates, including rural ranchers, join with Cowboys for Trump in a 2019 protest at the New Mexico state Capitol in Santa Fe.
Gun rights advocates, including rural ranchers, join with Cowboys for Trump in a 2019 protest at the New Mexico state Capitol in Santa Fe.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States