Santa Fe New Mexican

Stansbury, Sedillo Lopez in runoff

Final voting today for Democratic nomination to fill Haaland’s vacated seat

- By Dillon Mullan dmullan@sfnewmexic­an.com

The race within the state Democratic Party to secure a path toward U.S. Interior Secretary Deb Haaland’s vacated congressio­nal seat is headed to a runoff.

After none of the eight candidates received more than 50 percent of votes cast Tuesday by state Democratic Party central committee members from the 1st Congressio­nal District, the members will have a second round of voting to choose between state Sen. Antoinette Sedillo Lopez and Rep. Melanie Stansbury to face Republican Mark Moores in the June 1 special election.

Both Sedillo Lopez and Stansbury represent districts in Albuquerqu­e.

Sedillo Lopez received 74 of 199 votes Tuesday. Stansbury finished second with 43 votes. Albuquerqu­e Attorney Randi McGinn finished short of the runoff in third place with 34 votes.

Final voting by the committee will take place from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Wednesday.

Sedillo Lopez, a retired law professor at the University of New Mexico, grew up in Los Chavez, a small town south of Albuquerqu­e. She ran for the congres

sional seat in 2018 and finished third in a six-way primary, securing half as many votes as Haaland. She was appointed to the state Senate in 2019 and was comfortabl­y reelected in November. On her campaign website, she says she supports progressiv­e policies such as Medicare for All, the Green New Deal and free higher education.

“I am thrilled to be the top vote-getter. The State Central Committee members represent all corners of CD-1 and were a diverse group of people with a variety of perspectiv­es on the future of our party and our country,” Sedillo Lopez wrote in an email Tuesday night from the Senate floor, where lawmakers were convened for a special session. “I learned so much from speaking to committee members from our most rural communitie­s in Torrance County, Meadow Lake and surroundin­g areas, parts of Rio Rancho and of course Albuquerqu­e. I will work hard to make State Central Committee members proud to support me.”

Stansbury, who grew up in Albuquerqu­e and has experience in Washington, D.C., with the White House Office of Management and Budget and the U.S. Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, defeated a seven-term Republican incumbent in 2018 to win her seat in the Roundhouse. She also says she supports Medicare for All.

“With eight candidates in this race, it’s been a tireless effort to get here. My team is thrilled to advance to the runoff,” Stansbury said by phone Tuesday night. “Heading into tomorrow, we’re going to roll out a few more endorsemen­ts, and I feel like we have strong momentum and community support.”

Democrats have held the 1st Congressio­nal District since 2009. According to the Democratic Party of New Mexico, the state central committee within the district has 204 members — 190 in Bernalillo County, eight in Sandoval County, three in Torrance County, two in Valencia County and one in Santa Fe County.

Along with Moores, a state senator who has represente­d Albuquerqu­e’s Northeast Heights since 2013, Christophe­r Manning, who received 5.4 percent of the vote in 2018, will again be the Libertaria­n Party candidate in the race.

 ??  ?? Antoinette Sedillo Lopez
Antoinette Sedillo Lopez
 ??  ?? Melanie Stansbury
Melanie Stansbury

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States