YOU be our next Great Leader!!!
Hot from the NM Secretary of State…Deadlines coming fast!! Contact us now for how you can run & succeed. Many positions are uncontested. “NEVER LET THEM RUN UN-OPPOSED!” Be our next New Mexican Hero! We are here to help you! ♡
Constitution Party POTUS Candidate Billionaire Don Blankenship
The National Constitution Party Credentials Committee has vetted multiple POTUS Candidates- CPNM Registered Voters with $25/yr. 2020 dues paid can vote at our State Convention April 8, 2020. Meet Billionaire Don Blankenship!
https://www.donblankenship.com
Colorado STANDS for VOTERS and Suspends National Popular Vote Interstate Compact in 2019 !! Suspended In Colorado, the state legislature passed NPVIC legislation in 2019, which Gov. Jared Polis (D) signed on March 15, 2019.
“The following table provides a timeline of what states had joined the NPVIC, what political parties controlled government at the time, and the state’s electoral votes in 2020.”
https://ballotpedia.org/National_Popular_Vote_Interstate_Compact
State/District | Year | Government | Enactment | EVs (2020) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Maryland | 2007 | Democratic trifecta | Gov. Martin O’Malley signed legislation | 10 |
New Jersey | 2008 | Democratic trifecta | Gov. Jon Corzine signed legislation | 14 |
Illinois | 2008 | Democratic trifecta | Gov. Rod Blagojevich signed legislation | 20 |
Hawaii | 2008 | Divided government | Democratic-controlled legislature overrode Gov. Linda Lingle’s (R) veto of legislation | 4 |
Washington | 2009 | Democratic trifecta | Gov. Christine Gregoire signed legislation | 12 |
Massachusetts | 2010 | Democratic trifecta | Gov. Deval Patrick signed legislation | 11 |
Washington, D.C. | 2010 | Democratic trifecta | Mayor Adrian Fenty signed legislation | 3 |
Vermont | 2011 | Democratic trifecta | Gov. Peter Shumlin signed legislation | 3 |
California | 2011 | Democratic trifecta | Gov. Jerry Brown signed legislation | 55 |
Rhode Island | 2013 | Democratic trifecta | Gov. Lincoln Chafee signed legislation | 4 |
New York | 2014 | Divided government | Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed legislation | 29 |
Connecticut | 2018 | Democratic trifecta | Gov. Dannel Malloy signed legislation | 7 |
Delaware | 2019 | Democratic trifecta | Gov. John Carney signed legislation | 3 |
New Mexico | 2019 | Democratic trifecta | Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham signed legislation | 5 |
Oregon | 2019 | Democratic trifecta | Gov. Kate Brown signed legislation | 7 |
Total: | 187 |
Suspended
In Colorado, the state legislature passed NPVIC legislation in 2019, which Gov. Jared Polis (D) signed on March 15, 2019. Rose Pugliese and Don Wilson filed a veto referendum against the legislation, and collected signatures for the law to appear on the ballot. The veto referendum was certified for the ballot on August 29, 2019, which had the effect of suspending the law until voters decide the law’s fate at the election on November 3, 2020.
State/District | Year | Government | Election | EVs (2020) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Colorado | 2019 | Democratic trifecta | On the ballot for November 3, 2020 | 9 |
“Tyranny by Majority” How NM passing of (NPV) National Popular Vote gave away ALL our Electoral Votes
***There are over 20 MILLION people in Los Angeles and NYC Counties ALONE! Thats more Voters than the entire Populations of New Mexico, Oklahoma, Kansas, Wyoming, and more COMBINED! — so who will win a “Popular Vote” !?!
***The Founding Fathers identified this threat as “Tyranny By Majority” and thus established the Electoral College.
After the passing of NPV in 2017 unpatriotic legislators finally aquired a Govenor in Lujan that has sworn NM into the Interstate Compact. A euro-asian socialist attempt to destroy the U.S. Constitution and deny New Mexican Voters pure Constitutional Rights. THIS PROTECTS DIRECT TAXATION WITHOUT REPRESENTATION.
“The National Popular Vote Interstate Compact (NPVIC) is an interstate compact to award member states’ presidential electors to the candidate that receives the most votes nationwide. The NPVIC would go into effect if states representing at least 270 electoral college votes adopt the legislation.[1][2]
As of October 2019, 14 states and Washington, D.C., adopted legislation to join the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact. Together, they represent 187 Electoral College votes. Colorado, representing nine electoral votes, passed NPVIC legislation, but the law was suspended pending a vote on a veto referendum in 2020.[1][2]
Article II, Section 1 of the U.S. Constitution gives states the authority to determine how their electoral votes will be awarded: “Each State shall appoint, in such Manner as the Legislature thereof may direct, a Number of Electors.” This compact does not abolish the electoral college system; rather, the compact awards all of the electoral votes from the member states to the candidate who receives the most votes nationwide.[1]
History
Most states award all of their electoral votes to the candidate who receives the most votes in the state. In 2016, Donald Trump won the presidential election with 304 electoral votes but Hillary Clinton received the most votes nationwide. The 2016 election was not the only instance in which the winner of the presidential election did not receive the most votes nationwide; it happened in five of the 58 presidential elections in U.S. history.[3]” – https://ballotpedia.org/National_Popular_Vote_Interstate_Compact
“The National Popular Vote bill will take effect when enacted into law by states possessing 270 electoral votes (a majority of the 538 electoral votes). It has been enacted into law in 16 jurisdictions possessing 196 electoral votes, including 4 small states (DE, HI, RI, VT), 8 medium-sized states (CO, CT, MD, MA, NJ, NM, OR, WA), 3 big states (CA, IL, NY), and the District of Columbia.
The bill will take effect when enacted by states possessing an additional 74 electoral votes. The National Popular Vote bill has now passed a total of 40 state legislative chambers in 24 states. It has also passed at least one legislative chamber in 8 states possessing 75 electoral votes (AR, AZ, ME, MI, MN, NC, NV, OK). It has been unanimously approved at the committee level in 2 states possessing 27 more electoral votes (GA, MO).
The National Popular Vote bill has been introduced in various years in all 50 states.”
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