Thursday, December 07, 2023Other Voices: "Never A Bad Session" For Powerful Liquor Lobby; Quarter A Drink Tax Will Be Back But Could Again Be Drowned In State With Highest Alcohol-Related Deaths, Plus: Below The Belt? Council Candidate Hoehn Ripped In PAC Ad
In this edition of Other Voices we welcome former longtime NM political reporter Steve Terrell who is now putting his considerable talents to work for government watchdog group Common Cause.
The group is closely following the proposal to raise the state booze tax a quarter a drink in order to cut into the exceptionally high alcohol-related death rate in the state--the worst in the nation. A tiny tax hike was approved at the last session but then MLG stunned supporters by vetoing even that. As Terrell writes, because of an exceptionally powerful lobby raising the alcohol tax at the next session in January won't get any easier. Here's his column: Raising the tax on alcohol in New Mexico will hurt small, locally owned businesses like local brew pubs and wineries and neighborhood bars. And raising those taxes will hurt the tourism industry, which is crucial to New Mexico’s economy. NEVER A BAD SESSION A recent report by Common Cause New Mexico – written by former state Sen. Dede Feldman and myself – looks at how the alcohol lobby and its allies have for years been successful in thwarting in any increase in the tax on alcohol. BELOW THE BELT?
First things first. ABQ District 6 City Council candidate Jeff Hoehn has not been charged with sexual harassment by "multiple women." He does not engage in discrimination" against people of color trying to buy homes" and he certainly did not have to pay a $1.8 billion jury verdict for "inflating the price of homes sales commissions." Voters receiving the attack mailer from the Real NM Leadership PAC supported by labor unions and others backing Dem Nichole Rogers in her next Tuesday election run-off against Hoehn would know that if they looked below the accusations and read the very fine print that explained how Hoehn came to be associated with the sensational charges. That fine print states: KRQE and The New York Times have reported on housing discrimination, sexual harassment claims, and price inflation involving the National Association of Realtors. But most voters in the SE ABQ district are not going to look that far and that raises the question of whether this hit was below the belt. Hoehn is supported by the Help ABQ PAC that received money from real estate interests but he does not have any control over what the PAC says or does and he can't stop them from supporting him--although he has not rejected their support. The hit on Hoehn does say at the top that the charges being leveled are against "Hoehn's biggest backer" but it's the guilt by association headlines next to Hoehn's photo that will grab most voters' attention. So on a below the belt scale of one to ten this one scores an 8. In another campaign finance note, we reported exclusively that Hoehn, who bills himself as a "progressive Democrat," accepted a $1,500 contribution from conservative Republican City Councilor Trudy Jones. Hoehn has yet to explain how that doesn't conflict with his self-awarded description of being a progressive Dem. This is the Home of New Mexico Politics. E-mail your news and comments. (newsguy@yahoo.com |
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