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A bold agenda for fighting corruption

Susana Martinez

Public corruption is a deep and unacceptable scourge that has befallen New Mexico and threatens every aspect of life in our state. This corruption has resulted in inflated budgets and costs that are passed onto every one of us in the form of higher taxes and lost jobs. In a time of historic budget deficits, the consequences are catastrophic.

There has been a massive failure on the part of the Richardson/Denish Administration in this area resulting in one of the most corrupt state governments in New Mexico history where “pay-to-play” has become a household term.

Some in state government feel they are above the law. They have abused their positions and the public trust and left our state weakened and vulnerable in pursuit of personal gain.

To rectify this, I have established a framework that allows us to reform how state government functions so we can eliminate corruption and deliver bold change for New Mexico.

We must restore integrity and trust in our government. That starts on day one of a Martinez Administration as real leadership with a record of fighting malfeasance and holding people to account will arrive in Santa Fe. The acceptance of a culture of corruption will finally come to an end, and a new culture of zero tolerance and responsibility will be instilled in the Roundhouse as we once again serve the people we represent.

Here’s my plan:

Meaningful enforcement

Public corruption is a serious crime and must be treated as such. We must strengthen our enforcement mechanisms and provide real consequences for corruption. There will be zero tolerance for violating the public trust in a Martinez Administration.

  • Failure to Report: Elected officials have a responsibility to the public to report crimes of violating the public trust. Failure to report these acts should be a crime.
  • Loss Of contract status/lobbyist registration: Lifetime ban for any contractor of the state or lobbyist convicted of violating the public trust.
  • Public corruption division: A new public corruption division should be created within the New Mexico State Police. The division will be charged with collecting tips from the public on government corruption through a new public corruption hotline, investigating acts that violate the public trust and referring any cases for prosecution to the proper authority.
  • Harsh sentences for public corruption: For public officials or public employees convicted of violating the public trust, the sentence should be severe. For each of these individuals they should face harsh felony consequences along with minimum mandatory imprisonment.
  • Increased penalties: For any elected official or public employee convicted of violating the public trust for personal gain, they must surrender their accrued pensions as well as face a fine not greater than their salary.
  • Elected official removal from office: Those convicted of a crime for any felony or crime of moral turpitude while serving in office should be immediately removed from office upon conviction and barred from elective office for life.

Eliminating conflicts of interest


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  • Disclosing and avoiding conflicts: All appointed members of the Martinez administration will file personal financial disclosure information to ensure their work for the public does not benefit themselves, their family or their business associates. All financial disclosure statements will be posted online for easy access by the public.
  • Capital outlay reform: We must eliminate conflicts from the capital outlay process. Legislators should be prohibited from appropriating funds that benefit any private company or organization with whom they have financial interests or government entity controlled by relatives. Each capital outlay request must have an affidavit by the sponsoring legislator stating that they, their family or business associates will not benefit from the capital outlay funds. Those found in violation of the policy will face penalties.

Political campaign reform

  • Campaign report examinations: Currently, the secretary of state must examine 10 percent of all campaign reports at random. These examinations should be posted online with a report of how many were conducted, what discrepancies were discovered and what is being done to remedy the problems that were uncovered.
  • Increased campaign reporting: Campaign contributions too often fly under the radar in New Mexico, with too much time between reporting cycles, especially in non-election years. To help increase transparency we need to move to a year-round, real-time campaign reporting system. This will help to identify who is giving to campaigns and who is receiving, helping to root out pay-to-play issues.

Lobbying reform

  • Implement cooling-off period: Legislators and members of a Martinez Administration will be prohibited from lobbying for two years after leaving the Legislature or leaving the administration. By implementing a two-year waiting period before legislators and members of the executive can become lobbyists, it will ensure that we close any revolving doors and ensure there have been no inappropriate relationships between those in decision-making positions and those seeking to do business with the state. Currently legislators are excluded from this provision in the Governmental Conduct Act.
  • Limit government lobbying: Currently, state agencies are allowed to utilize the services of paid lobbyists to advocate for or against bills during a legislative session. No department or agency should be allowed to use taxpayer funds to lobby the Legislature. Cabinet officials and departments of government have many talented individuals who are experts in their field. As a savings to state government these secretaries, deputy secretaries or department heads should be the advocates for their agencies in front of the Legislature, not paid contract lobbyists.

Open government

  • Webcasting of meetings: All meetings of the Legislature that are webcast should be archived online, bringing people closer to the workings of state government regardless of where they live. Recently the Legislature opened their doors for the first time to live broadcasts of their meetings online to help people watch and listen to the Legislature in action. The governor and executive branch of government should follow their lead and open up meetings of executive boards and commissions to the public by streaming them online.
  • Create an online, real-time checkbook: If New Mexico is to become truly transparent, our online checkbook must have real-time information, similar to the award-winning operation created by Missouri. Transparency at all levels of state government is necessary, but especially so in our budgeting and spending process.
  • Contracts Online: All government contracts should be available online in an easy-to-search database. Currently only state contracts of $20,000 or greater are posted online.

Clean government

  • Reduce/eliminate political positions: Over the last eight years, the number of political appointees has exploded under the Richardson/Denish Administration. We must reduce or eliminate many of these positions. We must have greater reliance on merit, qualification and experience as factors in the hiring of state government positions, rather than on political connections.
  • Strengthen the governmental conduct act: Currently, only legislators are required to undergo ethics training every two years. All state elected officials, political appointees and state employees should take ethics training, attending a minimum of two hours of ethics and professionalism continuing education and training each year.
  • Eliminate finder’s fees: New Mexico needs a strong law eliminating the use of finder’s fees in state investments. The State Investment Council has implemented a policy against this practice, but the only way to strengthen this policy is to place it in law and institute harsh penalties for violating it.

Martinez is the Republican nominee for governor.

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7 comments so far. Scroll down to submit your own comment.

  1. SEC just slapped Swiftboard-Backing Billionaire Brothers with $550 Million Worth of Fraud, Insider Trading Charges, etc. They are Texas billionaire investors known for their support of conservative candidates and causes.

    The Swiftboard-Backing Club includes Robert J. Perry also from Texas who gave Oh! Susanna the largest campaign contribution in New Mexico History! How many millions of dollars worth of fraud has he committed?

    Oh! Susanna Oh! Why don’t you investigate Robert J. Perry. Oh! Forgot. There are double standards when it comes to you taking on corruption!

  2. Started reading this then found myself literally going “blah blah blah” after about the third sentence. The problem with this list of changes (aside from the fact that they will be incredibly difficult to write nto enforceable law due to their incredible vagueness and subjectivity) is that they will take more than a Governor to implement. You’ll need to work with a legislature, an Attorney General, and various other offices not ruled by the Gov’s direct authority. Someone who thinks they can just enact these new rules by decree, who has no experience working with these entities is really naive.

    More and more, Martinez looks merely like a handpicked puppet for the deeply embedded business cult in the Republican Party. It’s history is taken from the national Party’s play book: con social conservatives, budget hawks and patriotic types into thinking you care about them, get elected, then abandon them by the side of the road while you and your buddies raid the coffers. Again, Hemingway provides interesting insight into their real agenda. NMTA writes in glowing and vague language that seems so, well, decent and sane—yet if you actually READ it for content, it’s pretty scary. I especially liked:

    “NMTA supports a more rational state environmental policy — one that recognizes that the cleanest environments are derived in those societies where abundant wealth allows the citizens the luxury of worrying about the environment.”

    Love it! In other words, when people are not “wealthy’ they don’t “worry” about clean, healthy, safe environments to live in. That’s a “luxury” that comes sometime down the road when we create our gated communities with their private parks and swimming pools where we can keep the riff-raff out.

    Good Grief.

  3. Ms. Martinez’s lobbying reform is a joke. No where does she recommend prohibiting government contractors, anyone seeking major government subsidies, and registered lobbyists from making or bundling political contributions to state or local elected officials. The reason why is obvious her biggest contributors (the oil and gas industry) would be barred from corrupting our elected officials with campaign money. New Mexicans need to see through this charade.

  4. Martinez’ plan against corruption in NM is pretty impressive at first glance. The problem is, she’s going to have to get it past entrenched legislators who like things just the way they are. This will be interesting to watch if she gets elected as governor.

  5. Ms. Martinez has a laundry list of ways to fight corruption basically composed by the New Mexico Turn Around (NMTA), a political committee and a propaganda machine founded in 2001 and mostly funded by the oil and gas industry. Its Board consists of Harvey Yates, Ryan Cangiolosi, Niel Hise, Garth Simms and Martin Sisneros.

    The NMTA political goals are :

    ” NMTA believes that political corruption erodes the rights of the people, dissipates their public wealth and diminishes private endeavor — all for the benefit of scoundrels. It believes that political corruption has long burdened New Mexico and, to a significant extent, lies behind the failure of the state to achieve its potential.
    NMTA supports a rational regulatory environment in the state — one which would reduce regulation to that necessary to protect the actual health & safety of the citizens of the state.

    NMTA supports a more rational state environmental policy — one that recognizes that the cleanest environments are derived in those societies where abundant wealth allows the citizens the luxury of worrying about the environment. NMTA supports environmental policy which values human endeavor, human liberty and human health over that of other animals.

    NMTA supports lowering taxes in order to allow citizens, rather than legislators or bureaucrats, to spend most of the wealth created by the labor of the citizens.

    NMTA supports cutting the size of government in order to lessen government’s propensity to reduce individual liberty and to suck up and dissipate the wealth created by citizens.

    NMTA opposes corporate welfare because it contorts the purpose of government, generally diminishes competition, and entails a system of forcing, through taxation, a citizen to support the business endeavors of others.

    NMTA opposes the diminution of traditional American liberties by statute or regulation — particularly when the purposes of the statute or regulation are emotionally driven, the scientific basis on which they stand are dim and the ultimate consequences of the statute or regulation are not understood. ”

    NMTA is basically putting the words in the mouth of Ms. Martinez. Is this what we want in New Mexico industry running the state and supposedly fighting corruption? Supposedly is the operative word. I doubt highly corruption will be reduced in New Mexico by the NMTA and their cohorts. By the way if Ms. Martinez (NMTA) is elected, the corruption list will never see the light of day if she is elected.

  6. This is the most sane and in depth idea for this state I have been privy to since I came back to New Mexico almost 11 years ago. Martinez would be the best thing to happen to this state in over 90 years.

    It is about time we got an honest person in office that would keep the would-be crooks out of government.

  7. Seems interesting and we all should look sharply at this plan. But it seems Martinez should name her campaign the Martinez/Sanchez campaign or she should admit that she is going be just like Bill Richardson…she is going to shut John out just like Richardson shut Denish out.

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