Las Vegas Review-Journal

Judge rejects parts of N.M. campaign finance law

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ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M. — Some parts of a New Mexico campaign finance law limiting the amount of money state political parties can give are unconstitu­tional, a federal judge ruled.

Chief U.S. District Judge William P. Johnson issued an opinion Thursday on a lawsuit first filed 11 years ago by the Republican Party of New Mexico and other plaintiffs with GOP ties, the Albuquerqu­e Journal reported.

The campaign finance regulation­s are part of the state’s Campaign Reporting Act. State Republican officials including from Bernalillo County, Doña Ana County and Gop-leaning organizati­ons challenged five of the set limits.

Johnson found three violated the First Amendment. They include an $11,000 limit on state parties’ contributi­ons to gubernator­ial candidates or candidate committees and a $5,500 limit for all other candidates and county parties each election cycle.

The limits on candidate donations were lower compared with other states’ limits and lower than limits upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court, according to Johnson.

In regard to contributi­ons to county political parties, the judge ruled the state didn’t show enough evidence proving there was a risk of a “quid pro quo corruption” or the appearance of it.

But the judge dismissed the lawsuit’s challenge to a $27,500 cutoff on contributi­ons from individual­s and entities to state political parties. He also left intact a $27,500 limit on contributi­ons from national political parties to state political parties for federal elections.

The campaign finance laws were enacted in 2009 in response to political corruption in the state.

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