Our mission is more critical than ever.   We are ready to defend our democracy - Click for more!

Menu

Report

Democracy Candidate Survey 2024

An educational survey of candidates in New Mexico on pro-democracy issues was conducted by Common Cause New Mexico, New Mexico Open Elections, Fair Districts for New Mexico, and New Mexico First.

Following the 2024 Primary Election, four pro-democracy nonprofit organizations based in New Mexico conducted a survey of General Election candidates to discover more about their position on pro-democracy and government reform legislation.

The collaborative survey created by Common Cause New Mexico, Fair Districts New Mexico, NM First, and New Mexico Open Elections probed candidates on their understanding, support, or opposition of policy initiatives that are supported by each of the organizations.

Candidates from both major political parties as well as independent and minor parties were contacted and surveyed with responses received from 23 candidates for New Mexico State House of Representatives, 12 candidates for New Mexico State Senate, and 2 for US House of Representatives.

Overall we observed broad support across all of the proposed policy reforms with only a few exceptions with less than majority support.

Read the full survey report

Read the press release

Related Resources

See all Related Resources

National Report

New Mexico Community Redistricting Report Card

Report

Democracy Candidate Survey 2024

An educational survey of candidates in New Mexico on pro-democracy issues was conducted by Common Cause New Mexico, New Mexico Open Elections, Fair Districts for New Mexico, and New Mexico First.

Report

UNM Report on Legislative Professionalism for the State of New Mexico

UNM Study of Legislative Process Ranks NM Near Bottom in Professionalism; Suggests Longer Sessions, Salaries and More Staff

Report

PRISON GERRYMANDERING IN NEW MEXICO

The Supreme Court requires state- and local governments to update their electoral districts once per
decade to ensure that each district contains the same population, which gives each resident equal
representation in government. However, the U.S. Census Bureau counts people where they are
incarcerated, not where they are from, so when jurisdictions rely on raw Census data which does not
reflect their real populations, democracy suffers.

Close

Close

Hello! It looks like you're joining us from {state}.

Want to see what's happening in your state?

Go to Common Cause {state}