Grading State Disclosure 2003 Logo Graphic

N e w . M e x i c o

Grade
Rank
F
44

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Subcategories
Grade
Rank
     
Campaign Disclosure Law
F
44
Electronic Filing Program
F
31
Disclosure Content Accessibility
F
45
Online Contextual & Technical Usability
F
33
     

Grading Process green cube Subcategory Weighting green cube Methodology green cube Glossary

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The State of Disclosure in New Mexico

New Mexico's disclosure program ranks close to the bottom in the nation, showing that there is significant room for improvement in the state's efforts to make campaign finance data accessible to the public.

Candidates for office in New Mexico file one campaign finance statement before the primary and two statements before the general election, the second of which is due five days before Election Day. In addition, an annual statement is due in both election and non-election years. Candidates must provide detailed information about all contributors, including a contributor's occupation for those who have given $250 or more. Last-minute contributions of $500 or more for legislative candidates and $2,500 or more for statewide candidates must be reported within 24 hours. All expenditures must be disclosed, but subvendor information is not required. Another important gap in New Mexico's disclosure law is the lack of independent expenditure reporting. Electronic filing of campaign statements is voluntary for all statewide and legislative candidates. The state does provide candidates with free filing software, even though funding for electronic filing was described by agency staff as inadequate.

New Mexico could do a lot to improve the accessibility of campaign finance records housed at the Secretary of State's office and to make its disclosure web site more substantive and user-friendly. There is no searchable campaign finance data on the site; instead, paper reports are scanned and made available online as images, which limits the usefulness of the information. It can take a long time for reports to be posted to the site, and viewing them requires special software that displays records improperly or not at all on some computers. One good feature of the site is its comprehensiveness — scanned reports cover all state-level candidates, include both original reports and amendments, and date back to the 1998 primary election.

The usability of the disclosure web site could also be improved, especially contextual information. For example, the site does not adequately describe the scope of the records it contains — there is no statement of exactly whose reports are there, and individual reports do not include the time period during which contributions were collected and expenditures were made. To help the public better understand campaign finance trends in the state, the agency could add an overview of the information reported by all candidates; if resources do not allow for an in-depth, comprehensive analysis, then a simple chart of total amounts raised and spent by individual candidates would be useful.

Usability testing results for New Mexico reflect the weaknesses of its site. Testers could not access the data to find out how much money was raised by the governor or locate the names of individual contributors.

Disclosure Agency: Secretary of State
Disclosure Web Site:
http://www.sos.state.nm.us

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This page was first published on September 17, 2003
| Last updated on September 17, 2003
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