Former Interior Secretary Deb Haaland and ex-Mayor Gregg Hull to face off for New Mexico governor
Source: Associated Press
By SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN and SAVANNAH PETERS
Updated 11:17 PM MST, June 2, 2026
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) Deb Haaland is planning to lean into her roots as she seeks to become the first female Native American governor of any U.S. state, while her Republican challenger in New Mexico wants to end the Democrats nearly decade-long dominance of statewide offices.
Haaland easily clinched the Democratic nomination Tuesday, putting the citizen of Laguna Pueblo on a path to yet another potential first. She was one of the first two Native women elected to Congress and was the first Native American to hold a Cabinet secretary position in the U.S. government.
She celebrated her win at a historic plaza in Albuquerques Old Town neighborhood, where supporters gathered among a mariachi band and traditional Native hoop dancers. The event began with a prayer in Tiwa, one of many Native languages spoken among tribes in the state.
Haaland will face Republican Gregg Hull, the former three-term mayor of one of New Mexicos largest cities, in the November general election. Both recognize the challenges in leading a state that is grappling with high rates of violent crime, chronically underperforming in schools and facing cuts to federal safety net programs.
Read more: https://apnews.com/article/new-mexico-primary-governor-native-american-oil-ba6180bc3b985783b7811d56822b6b11
Cha
(321,012 posts)niyad
(134,400 posts)riversedge
(81,759 posts)Looking forward to seeing @DebHaalandNM
become New Mexico's next Governor. Congratulations on tonight's primary victory, and onward to November!
Quote
Deb Haaland
@DebHaalandNM
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10h
New Mexico, thank you for believing in what we can build together. Im honored to officially accept the Democratic nomination for Governor of New Mexico.
Link to tweet
?s=20
Clouds Passing
(8,223 posts)SpankMe
(3,772 posts)Auto theft, rape, property damage, domestic abuse, DUI and other crime related to alcohol - and drug related crime - are much worse than other cites of that scope.
Also, the Albuquerque police department is a blue wall of abuse, incompetence, corruption and little transparency. The cons want heads busted in hardcore law-and-order enforcement and prison sentences. The libs are probably too far left on focusing on disproportionate arests of minorities and hippy-dippy methods of reducing future crime like better parenting, mental health and such. The people there are fed up. I can't believe a Dem is still the mayor there. Alubuquerque proper is pretty blue, while Rio Rancho to the north is severe red. As Rio Rancho developed, there was white flight to Rio Rancho away from Albuquerque.
A governor Halland - who is hella popular in NM (I was just there) - had better find a program that addresses this or Dems could lose the state.
1. NM is over 10% native American, and you can bet they're going to vote for her along with the other 50% or so of Dems in the state - the race is hers to lose.
2. Try typing "Albuquerque" this many times. It begins to sound wierd.
AZProgressive
(30,043 posts)then sending more cops at that issue. I believe in prioritizing serious crimes and high end investigations but other things like mental health aren't bad solutions at all.
When I got out of the Army I had some untreated mental health issues from deploying to Kuwait/Iraq and I was homeless and it is hard to avoid doing things like trespassing since there is almost no legal place for a homeless person to exist. The Supreme Court made this problem worse. Ever since connecting with CASS I enrolled into the VA and was able to get subsidized housing. Eventually I qualified for a 100% service connected disability to I have a monthly income to pay rent and groceries, utilities, etc Now I'm not at risk so I'm completely law biding.
One thing more cops doesn't equal less crime -- https://www.amny.com/police-fire/more-police-officers-doesnt-mean-lower-crime-rates/
To bring the overall crime rate down for real you need to tackle root causes and be willing to be prepared for backlash from the public that wants quick results instead of patience with addressing systemic issues.