Women won a majority of seats in the New Mexico Legislature in the general election, stirring emotions of joy, surprise and vindication.
Voters in New Mexico will cast their ballots Tuesday in some key races in the 2024 election. Incumbent Democratic Sen. Martin Heinrich will face businesswoman and Republican challenger Nella Domenici in his bid for a third term in the U.
Democrats may have retained their hold on New Mexico with wins in every congressional race and the presidential contest, but shrinking margins of victory show voter support is shifting toward Republic
Democratic U.S. Rep. Gabe Vasquez is seeking a second term in New Mexico’s swing district along U.S. border in a rematch against the Republican he ousted in 2022.
Doña Ana County election workers had a late Tuesday night and an early morning as they counted remaining absentee ballots.
Despite Vice President Kamala Harris getting all of New Mexico’s electoral college votes, locally, Republicans made strides in key races. “We had a huge night across races here in New Mexico. I would say big picture,
Democratic Rep. Teresa Leger Fernández won reelection to a U.S. House seat representing New Mexico on Wednesday. Leger Fernández has spent much of her tenure pressuring the Biden administration and federal land managers to follow through with wildfire recovery in communities devastated by a pair of botched prescribed burns that resulted in the largest wildfire in the state's recorded history.
Cindy Nava, a former undocumented immigrant, Dreamer and Biden administration official, was elected to the New Mexico State Senate.
View live results of the New Mexico presidential election. See maps of county-by-county presidential election results in the race between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris.
Incumbent Gabe Vasquez was challenged by Republican Yvette Herrell for New Mexico's 2nd Congressional District seat in the U.S. House.
Vice President Harris was projected to win New Mexico, according to Decision Desk HQ, picking up the state’s five Electoral College votes. Heading into Election Day, New Mexico was seen as a
For the fifth consecutive election dating back to 2004, New Mexico went blue in this year's presidential race.