Services set for Alice King

The body of former N.M. First Lady Alice King will lie in state in the rotunda at the Roundhouse in Santa Fe from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Wednesday, the Albuquerque Journal is reporting.A service will be held Thursday at 9 a.m. in the Moriarty High School gym, which is expected to be filled with about 2,500 people. King died Sunday evening following a stroke she suffered on Thursday. She was 78. She was the wife of former Gov. Bruce King and the mother of current state Attorney General Gary King, and will be remembered as a tireless advocate on behalf of children. Continue Reading

Richardson holding fundraiser to try to erase debt

Commerce Secretary-designate Bill Richardson is holding a fundraiser in Washington on Thursday to try to pay off the debt from his unsuccessful presidential campaign.The fundraiser was first reported on today by The Politico, which had previously reported that Richardson was running out of time to pay off $150,000 in outstanding campaign debt because federal ethics laws would hamper his ability to raise money for himself once he officially becomes a member of Barack Obama’s cabinet. Obama announced the appointment of New Mexico’s governor last week, but Richardson must still be confirmed by the U.S. Senate, which won’t happen until late January or February. Richardson, according to today’s article in The Politico, will hold the fundraiser at the Georgetown home of William A.K. Titleman and his wife Maria. At the “waterfront reception,” the article states, donors will be asked to give up to $2,300 each. Both Titlemans, the article states, served in the administration of former Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Ridge. Continue Reading

ABQJournal honors retiring Sen. Domenici

“The people first put their trust in Pete Domenici when they elected him to the Albuquerque City Commission. New Mexicans liked what they saw, so they sent the hardworking son of Italian immigrants to represent New Mexico in the United States Senate,” Albuquerque Journal Publisher T.H. Lang wrote in Sunday’s edition of the newspaper. “To say that he repaid that trust would be a huge understatement. Few have done as much for their state and their country. He worked tirelessly during his six terms in the Senate on behalf of his beloved New Mexico, and built a national legacy on issues ranging from the budget to energy independence.”With that in mind, the Journal on Sunday published a special section dedicated to Domenici. Continue Reading

Former NM First Lady Alice King dies

This article has been updated. Alice King, the wife of former Gov. Bruce King and a tireless advocate on behalf of children, died tonight after suffering a massive stroke on Thursday. She was 78.Her death was announced in a news release from her son, state Attorney General Gary King. “On behalf of the entire family, I want to thank the many people who have been so supportive and for all their prayers,” Gary King said in the release. “We will let everyone know about public funeral arrangements as soon as possible. Continue Reading

Most voters in poll say Balderas should be lt. gov.

The majority of those who voted in last week’s non-scientific poll on this site said Diane Denish should pick State Auditor Hector Balderas to be the next lieutenant governor. Of 319 voters, 183, or 57 percent, picked Balderas, while 18, or 6 percent, picked state Rep. Luciano “Lucky” Varela and 14, or 4 percent, picked Lawrence Rael, executive director of the Mid-Region Council of Governments. Some 104, or 33 percent, said Denish should pick someone other than those three. Don’t forget to vote in this week’s poll, located at the top of the right column on this page. Continue Reading

NM’s money woes will force painful choices

New Mexico really is in a dire financial situation, and solving it is going to be painful, not just for government bureaucracies but also for average New Mexicans. The bottom line is this: The sharp drops in oil and gas prices mean the state has a current fiscal-year budget shortfall of about $500 million — in a budget of about $6 billion. But that’s not the extent of the problem. Forecasters predict that in the next fiscal year, the shortfall will be at least another $200 million. So the state has to come up with something along the lines of three quarters of a billion dollars during the 60-day legislative session that convenes on Jan. Continue Reading

Guv running out of time to pay off campaign debt

Gov. Bill Richardson’s failed presidential campaign still owes a great deal of money to Harry Teague and Johnny Cope for use of their corporate jet, and his appointment as commerce secretary means he’s running out of time to pay it off, The Politico is reporting. According to his latest report to the Federal Election Commission, Richardson still owes $139,000 to a corporation owned by Teague and Cope, Lea King, LLC. He used their jet during much of his presidential campaign. He also owes $11,000 to Albuquerque’s Branch Law Firm for use of its jet, the article states. That’s been known publicly for awhile. Continue Reading

Dems shouldn’t support Jennings for pro tem

By John V. Wertheim New Mexico’s Democratic state Senate Pro Tem Tim Jennings gave his most open signal yet on Monday that he will collude with the Republican minority to keep power. In an interview with the Albuquerque Journal, Jennings said, “When you look at it, I think I’ve got enough votes to be elected the pro-tem by all the members of the state Senate.” The Senate pro tem’s comments came after a weekend when Senate Democrats met in caucus and voted to oust Jennings from his position. In January there will be 27 Democrats and 15 Republicans in the Senate. If Jennings convinces six other Democrats to join him on his proposed ego trip, he will remain pro tem with the backing of the Republican caucus. Instead of accepting defeat gracefully, Tim Jennings is just too special to play by normal rules. Continue Reading

Denish names key members of transition team

Lt. Gov. Diane Denish today named key members to a transition team that will assist her as she prepares to take over as governor when Bill Richardson leaves for Washington to become commerce secretary. Denish named Kathy Keith as director and Chris Cervini as communications director for the transition team. Keith comes from Public Works, LLC, a private firm that assists governors and their cabinet agencies nationwide on projects involving planning, innovative policy and efficiency. She was the state’s economic development division director from 2003-2006 and has worked in several federal jobs. Cervini, currently external communications manager for Lovelace Health System, was chief of staff and communications and policy director for Denish from 2003-2006. Continue Reading

In defense of Tim Jennings

By Ellen WedumFormer Democratic Party of New Mexico Chair John Wertheim has criticized this blog on Nov. 26 and elsewhere Democrat Tim Jennings, the current president pro-tem of the New Mexico state Senate, for recording a robocall and radio spot critical of an environmental group’s persuasion phone program in support of newly-elected state senator Steve Fischmann. The phone program, conducted just before the Nov. 4 election, told respondents who said they were undecided that Fischmann’s opponent, incumbent Republican Sen. Leonard Lee Rawson, had used some of his 2003 capital outlay funds to pave a road that was not in his district, implying that his only reason for doing so was to increase the value of his own business. To quote the Las Cruces Sun-News, “The funding went to pave a street that wasn’t in his district but that passes by commercial property he owns.” Rawson served in the Senate from 1987 to 2008. Continue Reading

Thinking smarter, not spending more

Sen.-elect Fischmann says economic woes will make state strongerSteve Fischmann says he’s taking “a positive view” of the economic woes New Mexico is facing because of the huge drops in oil and gas prices. The Democratic state senator-elect from Las Cruces said in a recent interview that his business background has taught him that such times force organizations to think creatively about what’s working and what isn’t, and then their job is “shedding the things that aren’t working.” “Hopefully that makes you stronger,” Fischmann said. “… I plan to be pushing ideas that make us think smarter — not spend more.” Fischmann will head to Santa Fe for the session that begins Jan. 20 as someone who is largely unknown. He surprised many on Nov. Continue Reading

Denish: ‘I’m ready for this job’

It’s almost official: Assuming the U.S. Senate confirms Bill Richardson as commerce secretary, Lt. Gov. Diane Denish will become the first woman to be governor of New Mexico. The date that it will happen isn’t set. Richardson says he won’t resign until the U.S. Senate confirms his nomination, which won’t take place until after Barack Obama is sworn in on Jan. 20. That means the transition is likely to occur in the middle of a 60-day state legislative session in which lawmakers and the governor will have to make up for a budget shortfall of hundreds of millions of dollars. Continue Reading

Obama says Richardson should have kept his beard

Gov. Bill Richardson’s beard has received a lot of attention lately. Barack Obama gave it even more today.At the news conference in which he was nominated to be commerce secretary, Richardson was asked about his recent decision to shave his beard. Obama decided to answer the question for him. “I think it was a mistake for him to get rid of it,” Obama said with a smile. “I thought that whole Western, rugged look was really working for him. Continue Reading

Richardson to NM: I will never forget you

Obama says governor is uniquely qualified to lead department that’s critical to nation’s economic recoveryThis article has been updated. Gov. Bill Richardson had only a few words for New Mexicans today as he appeared with Barack Obama in Chicago to be nominated commerce secretary. “New Mexico, I will never forget you, and I will forever be grateful,” Richardson said. This morning’s news conference formalized what has been known for weeks: Richardson is leaving his job as governor of New Mexico with two years left in his term, meaning Lt. Gov. Diane Denish will become governor. In a news release that followed the news conference, Richardson provided additional details on the transition to the Denish administration. Continue Reading

An ‘awkward fit’ or a perfect match?

Richardson may be a good cheerleader for U.S. business, but does his past jibe with Obama’s campaign pledge? When Barack Obama nominates Bill Richardson to be commerce secretary later today, he’ll be putting the New Mexico governor in charge of what an article in The Politico calls a “sprawling bureaucratic fiefdom.” Some might say there’s no better job for a man many in New Mexico would compare to a feudal lord than overseeing an agency of nearly 40,000 employees that is in charge of everything from, according to The Politico, “the census to the National Weather Service to the Patent and Trademark Office to agencies charged with boosting economic development, international trade and minority businesses.” Obama, according to the Washington Post, is scheduled to officially announce his selection of Richardson to run the Commerce Department at a news conference in Chicago that begins at 9:40 a.m. New Mexico time. So let the scrutiny begin. The Politico article focuses on Richardson’s strong relationship with the business community and “his own brief foray into the corporate world (that) resulted in affiliations that seem an awkward fit with the president-elect’s platform.” “In the nearly two years between the end of the Clinton administration and his election as New Mexico’s governor, Richardson traded on the prominence and expertise he accrued as Bill Clinton’s ambassador to the United Nations and as energy secretary to land more than 20 paying gigs, yielding hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of directors’ fees and stock options — much of which came from entities dealing in areas directly related to his work in the administration,” the article states. Meanwhile, the article points out, Obama has “pledged to close — or, at least, slow — the revolving door between government and the influence industry, proclaiming in a speech featured on his campaign website that ‘you will not be able to lobby and cash in on service in my administration.’” Obama’s transition team, according to the article, “declined to answer questions about how Richardson’s corporate affiliations jibe with Obama’s agenda, because an aide called reports that Richardson would be tapped as commerce secretary ‘speculation.’” While Richardson’s past may not quite jibe with Obama’s promise, the commerce secretary’s most important job, the article points out, is being “chief cheerleader for U.S. business, both at home and abroad.” Many believe that may be a perfect match for Richardson.As governor of New Mexico, he “got along famously with the business community,” Terri Cole, president of the Greater Albuquerque Chamber of Commerce, was quoted in The Politico’s article as saying. Continue Reading