Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham is defending her decision to appoint her brother as a student regent at New Mexico Highlands University.
New Mexico's 60-day legislative session is shaping up to be a two-part blockbuster. The first stanza wrapped up Saturday, with lawmakers sending a high-profile crime package and a bill overhauling the state's behavioral health system to Gov.
"The political landscape in New Mexico is dominated by Democrat leadership, which has downplayed the border crisis until it became a politicized issue, and the consequences have been dire: loss of lives, victims of crime, rising homelessness and an overwhelmed border patrol," Soular added.
A fake executive order by Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham calls for law enforcement to immediately apprehend and detain the tech mogul if he enters New Mexico.
Three years after New Mexico began allowing the legal sale of cannabis, a bill giving a state agency authority to clamp down on illicit products is halfway
A long-shot proposal is seeking to reform leadership of K-12 education by returning to a state school board model.
Lujan Grisham is hoping at least 10 other public safety bills reach her desk, though Capitol insiders predict some of them will fail.
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The governor of New Mexico has appointed her 64-year-old brother to the board of regents at New Mexico Highlands University, as concerns about wasteful spending and cronyism roil the state’s regional university system.
A top judicial branch official said New Mexico's courts are willing to shoulder a larger role under a legislative plan to overhaul the state's mental health and
New Mexico governor nominated her brother in an executive message to state Senate leaders, who will have to make the final decision.
Governor, lawmakers eye new office, other initiatives during session to address state housing crisis
Lisa Lopez-Williamson wishes her family had moved to Santa Fe in 2019. “We would have been able to get a pretty decent deal” on a home back then, she said. Instead, they moved to the city in 2022, when housing costs were far higher.
A high-profile package of crime bills is on the verge of heading to Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham's desk for final approval. After nearly four hours of debate, the Senate voted 38-3 on Friday to endorse the measure,
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