Secretary of State of New Mexico

The secretary of state of New Mexico is a constitutional officer in the executive branch of government of the U.S. state of New Mexico. Twenty-six individuals have held the office of secretary of state since statehood. Since 1923, every elected New Mexican secretary of state has been a woman. The incumbent is Maggie Toulouse Oliver, a Democrat.[1] Toulouse Oliver's election was forced early due to the resignation of former secretary of state Dianna Duran in October 2015, after criminal charges were filed by the Attorney General's Office alleging Duran converted campaign funds to personal gambling debt.[2]

Secretary of State of New Mexico
Incumbent
Maggie Toulouse Oliver
since December 9, 2016
Term lengthFour years
Formation1912
First holderAntonio J. Lucero
WebsiteSecretary of State of New Mexico

Powers and duties

The secretary of state is in effect the guarantor of the continuity and stability of good government in New Mexico, with his or her role extending to the enforcement of elections and government ethics laws, the certification, filing, and preservation of legislation, gubernatorial acts, and other instruments vital to the efficient operation of state government, and the registration and regulatory oversight of commerce and industry.

Elections administration

The Bureau of Elections of the Office of the Secretary of State administers elections and enforces local, state, and federal election laws. The bureau's duties include training county clerks and voting machine technicians, maintaining the state's voter registration database, filing petitions of candidacy for candidates for public office, and administering the Native American Election Information Program, which is a special program to help improve voter registration and voter turnout among the Native American populations within the state.[3]

Campaign finance and lobbying regulation

The Ethics Division of the Office of the Secretary of State regulates campaign finance and lobbying within the state, and provides campaign finance and lobbying compliance training to various parties involved in government.

Commerce and industry

The Business Services Division of the Office of the Secretary of State provides various administrative and business-related services to the people of New Mexico. This includes the formation of corporations, limited liability companies, general partnerships, limited partnerships, and limited liability partnerships, the registration of trademarks, and the indexing of security interests under the Uniform Commercial Code and the Food Security Act of 1985.[4][5][6] The division is also responsible for licensing notaries public, issuing apostilles, and maintaining the office's computer systems, including the voter registration system managed by the Bureau of Elections.[7][8]

Miscellaneous functions

The secretary of state is responsible for filing slip laws, preserving legislative journals, and publishing state agency administrative rules. The secretary also maintains records of referendum petitions, serves as registered agent for service of process on behalf of foreign corporations, and ensures that proposed amendments to the New Mexico Constitution are published in at least one newspaper in every county in the state for four consecutive weeks in both English and Spanish.[9] Moreover, the secretary of state is second in the line of succession after the governor and the lieutenant governor. The secretary of state therefore steps in as acting governor whenever the governor and lieutenant governor are both absent from the state.

List of New Mexico secretaries of state

# Image Name Took office Left office Party
1 Antonio J. Lucero 1912 1918 Dem
2 Manuel Martínez 1919 1922 Rep
3 Soledad Chacón 1923 1926 Dem
4 Jennie Fortune 1927 1928 Dem
5 E. A. Perrault 1929 1930 Rep
6 Marguerite P. Baca 1931 1934 Dem
7 Elizabeth F. Gonzales 1935 1938 Dem
8 Jessie M. Gonzales 1939 1942 Dem
9 Cecilia T. Cleveland 1943 1946 Dem
10 Alicia Valdez Romero 1947 1950 Dem
11 Beatrice Roach Gottlieb 1951 1954 Dem
12 Natalie Smith Buck 1955 1958 Dem
13 Betty Fiorina 1959 1962 Dem
14 Alberta Miller 1963 1966 Dem
15 Ernestine Durán Evans 1967 1970 Dem
16 Betty Fiorina 1971 1974 Dem
17 Ernestine Durán Evans 1975 1978 Dem
18 Shirley Hooper 1979 1982 Dem
19 Clara Padilla Jones 1983 1986 Dem
20 Rebecca Vigil-Giron 1987 1990 Dem
21 Stephanie Gonzales 1991 1998 Dem
22 Rebecca Vigil-Giron 1999 2006 Dem
23 Mary Herrera 2007 2010 Dem
24 Dianna Duran 2011 2015 Rep
Mary Quintana (Acting)[10] 2015 2015
25 Brad Winter[11] 2015 2016 Rep
26 Maggie Toulouse Oliver 2016 Present Dem
Source:[12]

References

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