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On June 7th, primary elections were held in New Mexico amid national concerns of low voter confidence and constant, false allegations of election fraud. Now, officials are saying voter turnout was low, but not as bad as the state's last primary election in 2018.
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Congressional representatives, local officials and democracy advocates met at the Roundhouse for a hearing on voter access. The U.S. House of Representatives’ Elections Subcommittee is conducting similar meetings nationwide.
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The Otero County commissioners decided to conduct the audit despite legal concerns. State-level officials have expressed concern.
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The Cowboys for Trump founder is stoking election mistrust with a dubious audit, part of a nationwide gambit by some pro-Trump Republicans
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In Otero County, an audit of the 2020 election is underway, and includes volunteers knocking on people's doors to ask them about their vote. Dozens of people have complained.
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With hours left in the 30-day legislative session, a bill to expand voting rights in New Mexico made it to the Senate floor, but stalled as Republican Sen. William Sharer ran down the clock. Sharer’s filibuster was not the first procedural maneuver Senate Republicans employed to stop voting rights legislation from passing.
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After a bill expanding voting rights in New Mexico got hung up on the Senate floor, a version of it remains alive as the 30-day legislative session nears its end.
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A bill that would expand voting rights in New Mexico has lost more key provisions as it moves forward in the state Senate.
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The law was proposed after many officials — from the Secretary of State to local poll workers — reported an increase in aggression after the 2020 election
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Legislation moving through the state Senate aims to make absentee voting easier. The proposal reflects a new study that shows more than three times as many New Mexicans voted this way in the 2020 election.