NM Secretary of State asks Supreme Court to keep incumbent state Rep. Rebecca Dow off the ballot

New Mexico’s Secretary of State is asking the state Supreme Court to keep Rep. Rebecca Dow off the ballot, with oral arguments now scheduled for next week.

NM Secretary of State asks Supreme Court to keep incumbent state Rep. Rebecca Dow off the ballot
New Mexico state Rep. Rebecca Dow (R-Elephant Butte), center, announced on April 8, 2026, that she planned to appeal a court ruling that removed her from the June 2 primary ballot. (Patrick Lohmann / Source New Mexico)

Lawyers for the New Mexico Secretary of State argue a district court was correct to disqualify Rep. Rebecca Dow from the ballot over issues with her nominating petition

Joshua Bowling, Source New Mexico

This article was originally published by Source New Mexico.

Lawyers for the New Mexico Secretary of State on Wednesday asked the New Mexico Supreme Court to uphold a lower court’s decision to kick incumbent state Rep. Rebecca Dow (R-Elephant Butte) off the ballot for the June 2 primary election in a move that would leave the district with only a Democratic write-in candidate.

A state district court judge last week ruled to remove Dow from the ballot after Democrat Tara Jaramillo, who previously held Dow’s seat in the state House of Representatives while Dow mounted an unsuccessful gubernatorial campaign, argued that the incumbent inappropriately filed screenshots of her nominating petitions rather than the forms themselves.

Judge disqualifies Republican NM Rep. Rebecca Dow from June primary ballot
A judge removed Republican Rep. Rebecca Dow from the June primary ballot after ruling her nominating paperwork did not meet state requirements.

At the time, Dow vowed to appeal and wrote on social media that the judge’s decision “came down to a dispute over paperwork—a technical issue that has now resulted in our district having no candidate on the ballot.”

Dow, who first won election to represent District 38 in 2016, appealed the decision to the state Supreme Court on Monday. In her appeal, she contended that the issue at hand is “at worst a formatting mistake.”

Jaramillo and Dow did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

New Mexico state Rep. Rebecca Dow speaks at a podium during a news conference at the Roundhouse, flanked by two colleagues with the New Mexico House of Representatives seal visible behind them.
New Mexico state Rep. Rebecca Dow (R-Elephant Butte), center, announced on April 8, 2026, that she planned to appeal a court ruling that removed her from the June 2 primary ballot. (Patrick Lohmann / Source New Mexico)

In a Supreme Court filing Wednesday, Secretary of State general counsel Peter Auh wrote that Dow, indeed, fell “considerably short” of the requirements to make the ballot.

In addition to not being the forms required to run for office, Auh argued that Dow’s screenshots do not contain critical information to be a candidate, such as the addresses and voter registration status of the people who signed the nominating petitions.

Jaramillio’s attorney, former state lawmaker Daymon Ely, wrote in a filing that Dow “failed to accomplish this relatively simple task” of filing the correct nominating paperwork.

Update:

A state Supreme Court order issued Friday sets oral arguments in the case for Tuesday, April 21, at 9:30 a.m., according to court documents.

Joshua Bowling is a senior reporter for Source New Mexico. He's reported in New Mexico, where he broke stories of lavish spending at Western New Mexico University and more, since 2022.

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