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CO families must sign up to get $120 per child for food through Summer EBT; No Jurors Picked on First Day of Trump's Manhattan Criminal Trial; virtual ballot goes live to inform Hoosiers; It's National Healthcare Decisions Day.

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Detours on NM's Road to Voter Registration

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Wednesday, August 8, 2012   

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. - With two months left to make sure you're properly registered to vote in New Mexico, stumbling blocks are appearing.

Last week, Secretary of State Dianna Duran announced she would correct the state's voter files by issuing more than 177,000 postcards meant to purge non-residents and non-voters. While the state calls it a "notification process" to bring New Mexico into compliance for the first time in seven years, others believe it is voter caging - a method of challenging the registration status of voters to potentially prevent them from voting.

George Lujan, communications organizer for the Southwest Organizing Project, thinks the state has misplaced priorities.

"You have to look at the big picture and see all the time and effort that's being put into purging the rolls and seemingly limiting the amount of people that are going to vote, compared to the effort that's being put into getting people registered."

Lujan's concern stems from reports from several New Mexico counties, as well as third-party voter registration agents, who say they have run out of forms this year. The secretary of state's office says it has replenished forms to counties that ran out.

At times, says Oriana Sandoval, executive director of New Mexico Vote Matters, her organization has had to rely on federal or Spanish-language forms to register voters and that both forms have problems. Federal forms can be confusing - and English-speakers have trouble with the Spanish forms.

"They feel uneasy signing a form that they don't understand and are not able to read."

Sandoval says she has state forms now, although that doesn't make up for the people who tried to register to vote when she ran out.

"I believe there are New Mexicans that have been disenfranchised from the political process because they were not able to fill out a voter registration form, even though they wanted to."

David Thomson, an attorney for the Democratic Party of New Mexico voter protection team, has sent a letter to Duran saying the New Mexico election code prohibits voters from being disqualified for mismatched addresses, or for failing to send back the postcard. Thomson says the state isn't making it clear enough that the postcard does not affect a person's right to vote in the November election.


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