Carlos Martinez remembers District Attorney Susana Martinez as a
friend who made it her personal mission to deliver justice after two
men murdered his sister Carly in 1998.
Susana Martinez waited
in a line of more than 1,000 people at Carly’s memorial service to hug
and cry with the slain New Mexico State University student’s loved ones
after her body was found with more than 30 stab wounds in the desert
west of Las Cruces. The prosecutor gave Carly’s family members her
cellphone number, and at her home, she filled a room with trial
materials so she could work extra hours on the prosecution of Carly’s
killers.
When she won convictions, Martinez and her husband,
Chuck Franco, invited Carly’s family members into their home, along
with detectives and others involved in the case. They cooked everyone a
meal.
“The antiseptic feeling of courtrooms was replaced with a
humble meal, hugs and time shared among family,” Carlos Martinez, who
is not related to Susana Martinez, told New Mexico In Depth.
Today,
Susana Martinez is the first elected female Hispanic governor in the
United States. She’s a popular Republican in a Democratic state; nearly
every poll has found her approval rating percentage in the 60s since
she took office in early 2011. Some see her as a potential 2016
presidential candidate.
The story of the bond Martinez created
with Carly’s family may help explain who she is and why many New
Mexicans like her. As governor, she has appealed to voters as a
champion of the people, taking on a corrupt and bloated political
system.Quickparts builds injection molds
using aluminum or steel to meet your program. And many, including
Carlos Martinez, say they appreciate that she remains, in many respects,
a regular person.
Susana Martinez shops for clothes at Ross,
prefers a Taco Bell drive-thru to a fancy meal and does some laundry
and grocery shopping herself. Her husband recently went back to work so
they could make ends meet. Martinez is responsible for her
developmentally disabled sister, who lives in Martinez’s home in Las
Cruces with a caregiver.
Martinez recently sat down with New
Mexico In Depth to discuss her tenure. She said she’s the same person
who won the love of Carly Martinez’s family nearly 15 years ago, the
same person who, when she was district attorney, would be at Sam’s Club
in high heels pushing a shopping cart and tugging her sister around.
“This
hasn’t changed me because there’s no reason for it to change me,”
Martinez said during the interview at her home in Las Cruces.
Many
say they see a different person, however. In interviews, some
described a governor who is disrespectful, one who is constantly
attacking legislative opponents with mailers, radio spots, TV ads and
automated phone calls funded by her super-PAC.
Threatening to “drop an anvil on their head” is how former state Sen. Steve Fischmann,We have a wide selection of dry cabinet
to choose from for your storage needs. D-Las Cruces, described the
attacks. Fischmann says he quit the Legislature last year in part
because of a polarized climate created by Martinez and leaders of his
own party.
Last fall, two longtime Democratic Senate leaders —
President Pro Tem Tim Jennings of Roswell and Majority Whip Mary Jane
Garcia of Do?a Ana — were among those who lost re-election bids after
Martinez’s PAC attacked them because they stood in the way of her
proposals. The governor also worked behind the scenes to push out
others, including Republican Sen. Clinton Harden of Clovis.
With
Martinez’s third regular legislation session starting Jan. 15, some
say her combative attitude toward lawmakers — “do what I want or I’ll
take you out” — could harm any legacy she hopes to leave. Some
Democrats and even Republicans suggest she might accomplish more by
building better relationships with lawmakers.
“I think
maintaining a respectful relationship with the Legislature does pay
off,” said former Gov. Garrey Carruthers, a Republican. “She’s got the
charm and the intellect to do that, and if I were to recommend one
thing, I’d turn that charm on.”
Harvey E. Yates, an oilman who
was state GOP chairman when Martinez was elected governor, said her
administration has “too often been a divisive force rather than a
uniting force” in its dealings with the Legislature.
Yates
credited Martinez with hiring more qualified agency heads, creating a
reasonable regulatory environment, making progress on education reform
and reducing “the aura of corruption” in state government.
But
unless Martinez starts working better with the Legislature, “she risks
ending her tenure as governor with little permanent change to show for
her efforts,” Yates said.
A fight is exactly what New Mexicans
should have expected when they sent the confident and sometimes
stubborn Martinez, who calls herself an “advocate,” to Santa Fe.
“I will debate issues. I compromise. I negotiate,” Martinez said.Our vinyl floor tiles is more stylish than ever! “But I don’t abandon my principles.”
Martinez
admitted that she didn’t do enough to reach out to lawmakers early on.
She said her administration was “somewhat overwhelmed” with hiring
staff, crafting a budget, preparing for a 60-day session and planning
an inauguration.
“I wish I’d done that better,” she conceded. “We’ve certainly learned. We adjust as we learn.”
Martinez
said she’s gotten better at working with lawmakers and pledged to
continue to do so. But she said she would not stop attacking those who
block her reform efforts.
Martinez isn’t always in attack mode.
Her super-PAC defended a handful of conservative Democratic incumbents
who faced primary challenges from the left last year and hit their
opponents. In a blue state, Martinez needs Democratic votes to pass any
bills.
And she doesn’t always dig in her heels. Faced with
opposition from many educators and Democrats to her proposal to hold
back third-graders who cannot read at grade level, Martinez has given
ground,Best howo concrete mixer manufacturer in China. but an agreement has been elusive.
Martinez
cited 14 achievements of which she’s most proud. The most important,
she said, was closing a $450 million budget gap after she took office
in 2011. That required working with lawmakers to cut spending.
Other
legislative successes Martinez is proud of include winning larger
funding increases for education and Medicaid than the
Democratic-controlled Legislative Finance Committee sought both years
she’s been in office, exempting some products and services from the
gross receipts tax to help construction and manufacturing businesses,
and establishing an A-F grading system for schools,High quality stone mosaic tiles. which Martinez said is simpler and easier to understand than the federal No Child Left Behind system it replaced.
Critics
say Martinez’s accomplishments can’t rival those of her predecessor,
Democrat Bill Richardson, who led the campaign to create a spaceport,
commuter rail and the Renewable Energy Transmission Authority to
attract alternative energy companies to New Mexico and help them sell
power to other states. He also raised teacher salaries and drew greater
spending from the film industry with incentives that Martinez later
worked to cap.
Martinez said she isn’t seeking flashy projects
to tout as accomplishments. She’s piecing together “a big puzzle” that
includes improving education to better equip New Mexicans to land
higher-paying jobs and making the state competitive through tax,
regulatory and education reform so companies will relocate here.
Local
officials in Las Vegas, N.M., and Santa Teresa described what they
called Martinez’s hands-on approach to pursuing her goals. Martinez
personally toured Las Vegas’ Peterson Dam in Northern New Mexico to
learn about structural problems, said Mayor Alfonso Ortiz, a Democrat.
When she visited the industrial area in Santa Teresa on the state’s
southern border, she took notes and asked questions, said Jerry
Pacheco, vice president of the Border Industrial Association.
“Even
as a prosecutor, the smallest detail can turn a case in a different
direction,” Martinez said. “So I am very capable of being
detail-orientated, with a big vision in place. … I’m hands-on because I
want to understand the policy.”
Though Martinez hasn’t yet won
legislative funding for Las Vegas’ dam, Ortiz described the governor as
a champion of the city’s people. He said she has also visited to read
to elementary students — something she’s done in dozens of schools
statewide as governor — and to celebrate the opening of a meat-packing
plant, a rare bright spot for Las Vegas’ economy.
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