Santa Fe New Mexican

Effort to regulate dark money gains foothold in N.M.

- By Morgan Lee

New Mexico may take part in a fledgling effort to regulate and possibly limit the role of money in politics through an amendment to the U.S. Constituti­on, as legislator­s in a handful of states consider a pledge to help Congress with ratificati­on.

New Mexico lawmakers are considerin­g a memorial, a nonbinding resolution, to urge Congress to restore greater federal and local regulation of political spending that influences elections and governance. The memorial also would pledge support for a constituti­onal amendment to end partisan gerrymande­ring. Public debate has yet to take place.

The effort seeks to reverse U.S. Supreme Court actions including the 2010 Citizens United decision that cleared the way for unlimited independen­t elections spending.

“This is a simple way to say to Congress, ‘Pass this and come back to the state to ratify,’ ” said Rep. Linda Trujillo, D-Santa Fe, who is sponsoring the measure along with Republican Rep. Jim Smith and Democratic Sen. Jerry Ortiz y Pino, both of Albuquerqu­e.

Memorials do not require the governor’s signature. Republican Gov. Susana Martinez last year vetoed state

campaign finance disclosure rules that came under criticism as an infringeme­nt on free speech from several conservati­ve-backed groups.

The newly proposed memorial includes brief instructio­ns for separating political spending from free speech guarantees, and reclaiming federal and state authority to “regulate the role of money in elections and governance to ensure transparen­cy, prevent corruption, and protect against the buying of access to or influence over representa­tives.”

Heather Ferguson, legislativ­e director of the New Mexico chapter of the watchdog group Common Cause, noted that New Mexico and at least 19 other states already have asked Congress to overturn the Citizens United decision. The new initiative aims to start from scratch with specific, uniform instructio­ns, she said.

“This takes it that one step further,” Ferguson said. “Here is not only a request but also a directive on how to do it.”

The effort is backed by Common Cause, a national group that concentrat­es on government accountabi­lity issues, and Take Back Our Republic, a group focused on campaign finance reform with offices in Alabama, Texas and Virginia.

Similar legislativ­e measures are slated for introducti­on in a handful of states that include Alabama and New Hampshire.

John Pudner, executive director of Take Back Our Republic, said the goal is to gain a foothold in a geographic­ally diverse selection of states with a range of partisan allegiance­s.

Constituti­onal amendments can be approved by a two-thirds majority vote of Congress, followed by affirmatio­n by threefourt­hs of states, or through a constituti­onal convention authorized by two-thirds of state legislatur­es.

Common Cause and allied proponents of campaign finance reform say a constituti­onal convention would be prone to influence by political spending.

 ?? RUSSELL CONTRERAS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The New Mexico Capitol. New Mexico lawmakers are considerin­g a memorial, a nonbinding resolution, to urge Congress to restore greater federal and local regulation of political spending that influences elections and governance.
RUSSELL CONTRERAS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The New Mexico Capitol. New Mexico lawmakers are considerin­g a memorial, a nonbinding resolution, to urge Congress to restore greater federal and local regulation of political spending that influences elections and governance.

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