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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Park
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/23/2007
HB 1269
SHORT TITLE
Political Party Candidate Nomination
SB
ANALYST Moser
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Conflicts with: House bill 1099.
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Secretary of State (SOS)
Attorney General’s Office (AGO)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 1269 amends sections of the Election Code to generally remove requirements that
persons be members of the political parties nominating them as candidates for political office and
that persons signing nominating petitions be members of political parties.
Specifically, the bill:
1.
Removes NMSA Section 1-4-16B which currently requires that every person appearing
as a candidate on the primary or general election ballot be a candidate only under the
name and party affiliation designation appearing on his existing certificate of registration
on file in the county clerk's office on the date of the governor's proclamation of a primary
election;
2.
Amends NMSA Section 1-8-2D to allow a person to be certified as the nominee of a
minor political party without being a member of that party before the day the governor
issues the primary election proclamation if the state committee of the party has
authorized the nomination of that person by a majority vote; and the rules of the party, if
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House Bill 1269 – Page
2
any, do not prohibit the acceptance of nominations;
3.
Removes the requirement in NMSA Section 1-8-8B that a vacancy on the general
election ballot be filled by a nominee who belongs to the same political party as the
original nominee;
4.
Removes the requirement in NMSA Section 1-8-18A(1) that a person nominated by a
political party for a primary election be a member of that political party on the date of the
governor's proclamation for the primary election;
5.
Amends NMSA Section 1-8-21.1C to prohibit state conventions of major political parties
from taking only one ballot upon candidates for each office to be filled and removes the
requirement that the certificate of designation filed by the party with the Secretary of
State certify that the candidate has been a member of that political party for the period of
time required by the Election Code;
6.
Amends NMSA Section 1-8-27 removing prohibitions against a proper filing officer
accepting for filing more than one declaration of candidacy from any one individual and
requiring that candidates who seek but fail to receive preprimary convention designation
file a declaration of candidacy by nomination in order to have their names placed on the
primary election ballot;
7.
Amends NMSA Section 1-8-29 relating to the Declaration of Candidacy Form to remove
the certification that is a member of a certain political party and has not changed that
party affiliation subsequent to the governor's proclamation calling the primary election;
8.
Removes the prohibition in NMSA Section 1-8-31 against counting a signature on a
nominating petition unless the person signing is a member of the candidates political
party ten days prior to the filing of the nominating petition;
9.
Revises nominating petition signature requirements set forth in NMSA Section 1-8-33 to
remove references to a “candidates’ party" and replace them with references to “the party
whose nomination the candidate is seeking";
10.
Amends NMSA Section 1-8-36.1 to allow a person to be a write-in candidate if they are
qualified for the office they are seeking, without regard to political party affiliation;
11.
Amends NMSA Section 1-10-7 to allow a persons name to appear on the ballot more
than once, for each party that has nominated them;
12.
Adds a new section providing that for purposes of determining which candidate has been
elected, votes cast for the same candidate under multiple party names shall be totaled. For
all other purposes, including party qualification, votes cast under different party names
shall be counted and recorded separately. A voter who attempts to vote for the same
candidate under multiple party lines shall have the voter's vote counted as if the voter had
voted for that candidate on a line without any party name; provided that a vote for the
same candidate under multiple party names shall not be treated as an overvote;
13.
Repeals NMSA Section 1-8-19 which prohibits a person who has been a candidate for the
nomination of a major political party in the primary election from having his name
printed on the ballot at the next succeeding general election except under the party name
of the party designated on his declaration of candidacy filed for such primary election.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The AGO advises that this bill appears to adopt a modified version of the concept of “fusion
voting", proposed by the Progressive America Fund, Inc., and its National Open Ballot Project.
According to the corporate web site, “fusion voting" addresses the perceived “problem" of third
parties encouraging votes for candidates who can't win, or acting as "spoilers". Under the
concept of “fusion voting", as apparently incorporated in this bill, different parties can nominate
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House Bill 1269 – Page
3
the same candidate, yet keep their own place on the ballot. Voters have the option of voting for
their preferred candidates on the line of any party that has endorsed them. Votes for each party
are tallied separately, but added together to determine the winner. New Mexico is considered by
that organization to be a “direct ban state", whose statutes directly ban “fusion" around major
party candidates by requiring party affiliation.
http://www.nmef.org/fusionoverview.html
.
`
The bill would affect candidates in both primary and general elections.
This bill appears to allow political parties to nominate candidates for election who are not
members of those parties. It may have the unintended effect of allowing one person to run for
several offices during the same election. It would allow one person to run for election as a
representative of several different political parties. It would also allow any registered voter to
sign a nominating petition for a candidate, regardless of their political party affiliation. The bill
would also require state political party conventions to take more than one ballot upon candidates
for each office to be filled. Write-in candidates need not belong to a political party.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
House Bill 1099 also amends NMSA Section 1-8-36.1 relating to write-in candidates.
GM/mt