Santa Fe New Mexican

Kanye West no factor in New Mexico

- Milan Simonich Ringside Seat

If master strategist Kanye West takes away any votes from Democrat Joe Biden, it won’t be in New Mexico. West is a rapper better known by his real name of Mr. Kim Kardashian. He claims to be the presidenti­al candidate of a new political powerhouse, the Birthday Party.

West must have spent all of 90 seconds thinking of a catchy name for his political party. He devoted less time to understand­ing the basics of qualifying for an election.

“Mr. West missed the deadline to be placed on New Mexico’s General Election ballot,” said Alex Curtas, a spokesman for the Secretary of State’s Office.

Too bad for West. He had solid credential­s as the ultimate political outsider. At 43, he says he’s never voted.

West, though, claimed he was emotionall­y involved in the 2016 presidenti­al election. He wore one of those red caps to show his moral support for Republican Donald Trump.

Now West says he’s abandoned Trump in hopes of taking the presidency for himself.

Along with Trump and Biden, three other candidates for president have qualified for New Mexico’s November ballot.

Jade Simmons is running as an independen­t. Sheila “Samm” Tittle is the Constituti­on Party’s nominee in New Mexico, but it has a different candidate in other states.

The final presidenti­al candidate in New Mexico is Libertaria­n Jo Jorgensen. She has a tough act to follow.

Gary Johnson, who was a two-term governor of New Mexico as a Republican, was the Libertaria­n presidenti­al candidate in 2012 and 2016. Johnson in the last presidenti­al election received 75,000 votes in New Mexico, or more than 9 percent.

Though he finished a distant third behind Democrat Hillary Clinton and Trump, Johnson’s vote total gave Libertaria­ns major-party status in the state.

As for West and his Birthday Party, it will be a while before voters in New Mexico hear more from them. A long while, I hope.

New Democratic state Rep. Tara Lujan is a smoother navigator of political waters than West.

In the midst of a controvers­y over where she lives, Lujan was sworn in last week as the representa­tive in House District 48 in Santa Fe. The county commission­ers appointed Lujan on a 4-1 vote.

Lujan’s critics, operating anonymousl­y through emails, then said she doesn’t live in the district she represents.

Lujan, 47, told me she and her 6-yearold daughter live with her parents. Their house is in District 48.

Lujan’s driver’s license and voter registrati­on record list her address as her parents’ house.

Her foes at different times have said she lives in Albuquerqu­e or in Santa Fe’s House District 45, where she was registered to vote earlier this year. Lujan’s husband is still a registered voter in District 45.

No one has brought a formal complaint about Lujan’s residency to the New Mexico Democratic Party or the Secretary of State’s Office.

Members of the state Democratic Party Central Committee who live in District 48 will meet Aug. 15 to select a candidate for the House seat Lujan holds. Committee members will choose the Democratic nominee for the November election.

Brian Egolf, speaker of the state House of Representa­tives, said he expects Lujan to receive the party’s nomination.

She was solid on Democratic Party positions in her interview for the appointmen­t, said Egolf, D-Santa Fe.

I asked Egolf about Lujan’s residency. He said he was satisfied she lives in

District 48.

“She also meets the residency requiremen­ts under a state Supreme Court decision,” said Egolf, an attorney.

The case he cited was a 1990 decision in which the Supreme Court affirmed the election of Democrat Raymond M. Chavez as a Santa Fe County commission­er.

Republican Mel Apodaca said Chavez actually lived in Rio Arriba County. Chavez said he owned a house in Rio Arriba County, but his legal residence was his parents’ house. The two homes were next door to one another, but his parents’ house was on the Santa Fe County side of the line.

If Lujan receives the Democratic

nomination next week, she would be assured of winning a two-year term as a state representa­tive. Republican­s, who often wave a white flag of surrender in Santa Fe legislativ­e elections, didn’t field a candidate in District 48.

Lujan told me her residency shouldn’t be an issue.

“I live in Santa Fe and in the district,” she said.

So far, she’s convinced the powers that be. To be seen is whether any of her critics will come out from behind their computer screens to try to make a case against her.

State Rep. Tara Lujan Lujan, 47, told me she and her 6-year-old daughter live with her parents.

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