NM Supreme Court denies appeal over Republican Party Chair Barela’s removal

The New Mexico Supreme Court rejected the state Republican Party’s appeal after a judge ruled Amy Barela could not continue serving as chair.

NM Supreme Court denies appeal over Republican Party Chair Barela’s removal
The New Mexico Supreme Court on June 10, 2026, denied the Republican Party of New Mexico’s appeal over a lower court ruling prohibiting Chairperson Amy Barela from continuing to serve as chair. (Source New Mexico file photo)

The decision comes ahead of a June 20 State Central Committee meeting in Las Cruces, where Republicans are scheduled to name a new chair.

Patrick Lohmann, Source New Mexico

This article was originally published by Source New Mexico.

The New Mexico Supreme Court on Wednesday denied the Republican Party of New Mexico’s appeal of a lower court ruling that ordered party Chair Amy Barela to leave her post. 

Thirteenth Judicial District Court Judge Cindy Mercer in late May issued a ruling that prohibited Barela from continuing to serve as party chair, citing party rules that prohibit chairpersons from holding the post while also running in a contested primary. Her ruling also prohibited party leaders from endorsing candidates during the primary.

At the time of the ruling, Barela was facing off against Republican Jonathan Emery for an Otero County Commission seat. Emery narrowly beat Barela in the June 2 primary election.

Republican Party of New Mexico appeals to state Supreme Court to overturn chairwoman’s ouster
New Mexico Republicans are asking the state Supreme Court to overturn a ruling removing Chairwoman Amy Barela and restricting party endorsements during the primary.

Emery and other Republican candidates — gubernatorial candidate Duke Rodriguez and lieutenant governor candidate Aubrey Blair Dunn — filed the lawsuit April 30, saying that Barela violated party rules and, in doing so, disadvantaged Republican candidates competing in the primary.

The Republican party filed an emergency petition to overturn Mercer’s ruling on May 29, arguing it violated party members’ free speech rights and that courts are not the proper venue to resolve intra-party disputes.

The New Mexico Supreme Court unanimously denied that petition without explanation. 

The ruling came after RPNM attorney Carter Harrison asked the court to rule on the case before June 20, when the party’s State Central Committee is scheduled to meet in Las Cruces to name a new party chairperson. 

Court filings note that Barela “may” opt to run again and that “suggestions have been made that she is ineligible” due to Mercer’s ruling. Harrison’s filing notes that the defendants are “aware of no basis, now that the primary election is over, on which Ms. Barela would be ineligible.”

Barela did not respond to Source NM’s phone call Thursday morning about whether she intends to run again for party chair. 

Patrick Lohmann is a reporter for Source New Mexico.

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