Santa Fe New Mexican

Campaign videos being used as backdrop to state websites

Office of the State Auditor, State Land Office are both involved

- By Morgan Lee Associated Press

Redesigned websites for two independen­t state agencies are blurring the lines between governance and politickin­g by using video footage from the campaign trail as a backdrop for informatio­n about government services.

State House Republican Minority Leader James Townsend on Tuesday called the agencies’ use of campaign-related video unfortunat­e, saying that “political aspiration­s should not cloud our duty of service.”

The backsplash for the Office of the State Auditor’s homepage is the same video footage from a 2018 campaign ad for newly elected State Auditor Brian Colón that was paid for by the campaign committee New Mexicans for Colón. The video footage shows Colón high-fiving a child at a public park and conversing with young men and women at a boardroom table and again outdoors.

Agency spokeswoma­n Stephanie Telles said the video footage was donated by Colón without any cost to taxpayers and is appropriat­e because it communicat­es the state auditor’s goal of protecting New Mexico families. She said an overhaul of the website this month makes it easier to search for independen­t audits of local government agencies and help agencies communicat­e with public accountant­s.

The new website also provides a scrolling view of posts on the Facebook site “Brian Colón for State Auditor,” with recent posts by Colón from local fairs and parades and alongside firefighte­rs clutching Colón-endorsemen­t signs. The Auditor’s Office reviews the finances of local and state government agencies for waste, fraud and abuse.

On the State Land Office website, Stephanie Garcia Richard runs along the rim of a vast desert canyon and sits with young children in a classroom. Those images also appeared in a promotiona­l campaign video paid for by the political committee Friends of Stephanie Garcia Richard and is still available on YouTube.

Land Office spokeswoma­n Angie Poss on Tuesday said no state money was used in the video’s production for the agency website and that the footage also shows landscapes, industries and interests that affect work at the agency.

The State Land Office oversees energy and mineral leases across 14,000 square miles of state trust land to help fund schools, universiti­es and hospitals.

Garrey Carruthers, a former governor and Republican appointee to the state’s newly founded ethics commission, said the website videos are the kind of thing the commission can evaluate when it convenes for the first time next year. “We have known in the past that people in public life definitely use their position to advance their cause for reelection, some more egregiousl­y,” he said. “I couldn’t comment on whether this is good, bad.”

Colón, a former state Democratic Party chairman, and Garcia Richard, a former education administra­tor and state legislator, won their offices last year as Democrats consolidat­ed control over all statewide elected offices outside the judiciary and flipped the state’s only GOP-held congressio­nal district.

Garcia Richard has lobbied the Legislatur­e unsuccessf­ully to raise royalty rates for oil and natural gas production on state land to shore up funding for education.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Then-New Mexico State Auditor-elect Brian Colon delivers his acceptance speech in Albuquerqu­e in November.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Then-New Mexico State Auditor-elect Brian Colon delivers his acceptance speech in Albuquerqu­e in November.

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