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Thursday, Mar 28th

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You are here: News Politics Conservation candidates won elections, now must rise to address challenges like climate change

Conservation candidates won elections, now must rise to address challenges like climate change

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Following the Nov. 8 election, New Mexico will now have a congressional delegation consisting of strong advocates of conservation and public lands.

Democrat Gabe Vasquez joins incumbent U.S. Reps. Melanie Stansbury and Teresa Leger Fernández representing New Mexicans in the U.S. House of Representatives.

Mark Allison with New Mexico Wild and Greg Peters with Conservation Voters of New Mexico said Vasquez’s election was an important win for public lands.

Allison highlighted Vasquez’s resume, including working for New Mexico Wildlife Federation and the Wilderness Society.

“He’s an avid outdoorsman,” Allison said. “I think he is closely associated in the public’s mind with outdoor recreation, equitable access and conservation issues.”

That will be important for Vasquez’s southern New Mexico district, especially amid the transition from fossil fuels to clean energy sources, Allison said. He said Vasquez spoke during the campaign about holding the energy industry accountable while also recognizing the role that oil and gas play in supporting economies and providing jobs.

Overall, Allison and Peters said candidates who support conservation efforts in New Mexico won elections.

Leger Fernández and Stansbury were both re-elected in their races, as were Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham and Public Lands Commissioner Stephanie Garcia Richard.

This was not fully surprising as polls like the Colorado College State of the Rockies’ 2022 poll have shown voters in the western United States largely support conservation measures.

Peters highlighted that the State of the Rockies report showed 85% of those polled in New Mexico said that it was important for them to know what a public official’s stance was on the environment before they would support that official. He also pointed out that 82% of the New Mexicans polled said they would support the creation of new national parks, monuments, wildlife refuges and tribal protected areas.

Allison said it is also important for elected officials to work with communities that are linked to fossil fuel extraction to find ways to make the transition to renewable energy.

“That transition is going to be important and it’s going to be important to get [it] right,” he said.

By Hannah Grover
For NM Political Report