Here’s Everything Wrong With New Mexico’s Incredibly Dangerous New Election Law
The bill is a massive expansion of Democrat-backed election policies that blue states across the nation are intent on ramming through state legislatures.
On March 30, New Mexico Governor and Democrat Michelle Lujan Grisham signed one of the worst election bills in the U.S. country into law. The bill, dubbed the “New Mexico Voting Rights Act,” is a massive expansion of Democrat-backed election policies that blue states across the nation are intent on ramming through state legislatures.
As my colleague Shawn Fleetwood noted, such a strat is the result of congressional Democrats’ failure to pass HR 1, a measure that would cement Democrats’ radical election policies into law and federalize state elections. Because HR 1 died in the Senate in 2021, Democrats have decided the best way for them to change the country’s election laws is to implement them state-by-state. And New Mexico, where Democrats enjoy unified control of the state government, is an optimal place for them to start.
Here’s a brief overview of what the bill does.
Automatic Voter Registration
Starting in 2025, New Mexico residents who apply for a driver’s license will automatically be registered to vote, as well as in other public agencies “designated by the Secretary of State.” Such a move is reminiscent of Biden’s executive order federalizing elections, which turned federal agencies, especially those that dole out federal benefits, into voter registration centers. There are serious ethical concerns with tying federal or state benefits to election activity. As Federalist Editor-in-Chief Mollie Hemingway noted, “Federal agencies that interact with the public by doling out benefits can easily pressure recipients to vote for particular candidates and positions.” This same risk pattern presents itself in New Mexico.
Plus, by automatically registering those who apply for a driver’s license, New Mexico increases the chance of accidentally granting the franchise to non-citizen residents since the state allows noncitizens to obtain driver’s licenses. It will not be surprising if New Mexico ends up like Colorado, which also automatically registers those who apply for a driver’s license to vote and allows noncitizens to obtain licenses. Despite the Colorado Secretary of State’s insistence that noncitizen residents would not be allowed to register to vote, Colorado ended up sending 31,000 foreign nationals voter registration mailers prior to the 2022 midterm elections.
As Carla Sonntag, founder and CEO of New Mexico Business Coalition and Better Together New Mexico, told my colleague, Shawn Fleetwood, “HB 4 is far worse than anything we’ve seen before. Even though proof of citizenship is supposed to be required to vote, the automatic registration mandate includes New Mexico’ residents’ who may not be here legally. And since New Mexico provides driver’s licenses for nonresidents, this mandate significantly increases the likelihood of non-U.S. citizens being registered to vote.”