McCamley announces he’ll attempt to unseat Pearce

Doña Ana County Commissioner Bill McCamley announced today that he’s running for the 2nd Congressional District seat currently held by Steve Pearce, R-N.M.

McCamley, a Democrat, will have to face Al Kissling in a primary to earn the right to take on Pearce next year. There’s also a possibility that other Democrats, including State Rep. Joseph Cervantes, D-Las Cruces, will enter the race.

The stars will have to align for a Democrat to take down Pearce, Albuquerque pollster Brian Sanderoff said. Pearce, 59, was first elected in 2002 and has fought off challenges from strong Democrats in the past.

McCamley said he’s up to the task.

“We need leaders in Washington who will work together to find real solutions to the problems facing America,” he said. “We need results, not the same old political games. I will focus on developing Southern New Mexico’s economy, helping people get quality, affordable health care, and keeping Washington fiscally responsible.”

McCamley, 29, has been a commissioner since January 2005 and, in that time, has become a local powerhouse. He was elected chairman of the commission at his first meeting and quickly authored a rewrite of the county’s ethics policy.

McCamley pledged during his campaign to solve a decades-old water battle that hampered growth in the southern part of the county. A little over a month after he took office, the county and Sunland Park signed an agreement that ended the fight. Gov. Bill Richardson credited McCamley with being instrumental in negotiating the truce.

More recently, McCamley led the charge for approval of a 1/4 percent gross receipts tax increase in Doña Ana County to help fund Spaceport America – approval that is pending the consideration later this week of 541 provision ballots, but is likely.

He also pushed for a local tax increase for public safety and helped reorganize the county health care financing system to make it more efficient. McCamley said such results show a focus on representing the people who elected him.

“Steve Pearce has worked hard to represent the current administration and not the people of Southern New Mexico,” McCamley said. “I will work hard to bring back the voice of the 2nd District to Capitol Hill.”

Kissling disappointed, but will fight

Kissling said he was disappointed to learn McCamley had jumped into the race.

“I’m running,” he said. “I heard McCamley is running. I’m sorry to hear that, because I think it dilutes the energy we need to run against Mr. Pearce.”

Kissling immediately went on the attack, calling McCamley “young and impetuous” and saying he’s up to the challenge of tough primary and general elections.

“It will be the grassroots against the politicos,” Kissling said.

Kissling, who has never held elective office, ran against Pearce in 2006 and secured just over 40 percent of the vote. He raised and spent a little more than $180,000, while Pearce raised more than $1.4 million and spent just under $1.3 million.

Pollster Sanderoff said the money is just one of several major obstacles a Democrat will have to overcome to beat Pearce. A Hobbs oilman, Pearce wins a lot of Democratic votes on the east side of the district. Sanderoff said one model for challenging Pearce would be a strong, moderate Democrat from Las Cruces who can regionalize the race and win Republican votes on the district’s west side.

Sanderoff agreed with Kissling that a Democrat’s chance at beating Peace would be hampered by a primary race, but he said Kissling is “not the most credible or well-funded candidate.”

For a Democrat to have a shot at winning, Sanderoff said Pearce would have to face a scandal that challenges his credibility, and the national wave that favored Democrats in 2006 would have to continue in 2008. Sanderoff predicted the second would happen because of the unpopularity of the continuing war in Iraq. Pearce remains one of the strongest supporters of President Bush’s Iraq policy.

In addition, should Richardson successfully get on the national ticket as the Democrats’ presidential or vice presidential candidate, that would benefit Democrats running in New Mexico, Sanderoff said.

Fundraising must be an immediate focus

McCamley is a graduate of Mayfield High School and earned a bachelor’s in government from New Mexico State University. He also has a master’s in public policy from Harvard University.

He is executive director of the New Mexico Rural Development Response Council and has worked in many small communities in the congressional district, which could help him on the east side. McCamley said he plans to spend the next couple of months traveling the district to “continue my conversations about how we make Washington work for Southern New Mexico.”

He will also need to immediately focus on fundraising. Though Kissling started 2007 with only $2,555 in his congressional account, Pearce had $147,446.

Sanderoff said a Democrat, to successfully challenge Pearce, must convince the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee that he is in “a viable race to unseat an incumbent.” Doing that meant millions of dollars for Patricia Madrid’s unsuccessful campaign last year to unseat U.S. Rep. Heather Wilson, R-N.M.

McCamley recently went to Washington to meet with the group.

“I talked with many members of the DCCC, and they were very encouraging,” he said.

Will Cervantes enter race?

Cervantes is perhaps the most prominent Democrat who has considered running for Pearce’s seat in 2008. He said in December that he was seriously thinking about such a run.

“I think there are great opportunities to better represent this community in Washington than we see now,” he said at the time. “Las Cruces and Doña Ana County is a thriving community and deserves representation familiar with the area and with roots in the area.”

Cervantes is one to wait patiently for what he believes to be the right time to make a move, and he’s keenly aware that other strong Democrats, including Sen. John Arthur Smith of Deming and Attorney General Gary King, ran against Pearce and lost after resource-draining primaries.

Cervantes told me in December that he and his family would, “as soon as I’m done with the session,” meet and “make an intelligent decision and determine whether we’re the right person to represent this community and the southern half of the state.”

I was unable to reach Cervantes for comment this afternoon.

In recent months, Pearce has been eyeing the Senate seat held by Pete Domenici and the governor’s office. Though it’s not likely, if the current scandal involving U.S. attorneys or some other event were to end Domenici’s career before 2008, many speculate that Pearce would run for the seat even if Wilson also runs.

That would eliminate the Republican incumbency advantage in the 2nd District and might tempt Cervantes and other Democrats into the race.

Comments are closed.