Lydia Moynihan

Lydia Moynihan

Politics

Republicans spend big on Spanish-language ads in New Mexico, with hopes ‘Trump could change’ 20-year blue streak

Republicans believe they can win New Mexico for the first time in 20 years — and conservative advocacy groups are spending big on Spanish-language c🐟ommercials for the last two wee𝔍ks of the election.

“New Mexico is the dark horse this presidential cycle,” Jay McClesky, a longtime political strategist for Republicans in the state, told The Post. “New Mexico hasn’t voted for a Republican presidential candidate in 20 years but Trump could change that.”

An ad campaign targeting Latino voters in New Mexico slams Kamala Harris and Sen. Martin Heinrich, who is running for re-election, for rising inflation and crime. Election Freedom Inc

Sources say groups including the conservative advocacy group Election Freedom, as well as RFK Jr.’s Make America Healthy Again PAC, have ramped up their advertising efforts for 🦹a final push.

Election Freedom’s $5 million ad blitz is primarily going to pay for Spanish language ads that highlight how Kamala Harris and New Mexico’s Democratic senator Martin Heinrich have created inflation and allowed a surge in illegal immigration as crime rises — two issues voters in New Mexico overwhelmingly say they a🌌re focused on.

Republican advocacy groups are funneling millions into Spanish-language campaign ads in the state. Election Freedom Inc
The ads call on Sen. Heinrich to “stop lying.” Election Freedom Inc

“President Trump is making huge inroads with Hispanic voters and is actually leading among Hispanic men in multiple internal polls,” McClesky said.

According to polling from KAConsulting, Harris is up just three points in New Mexico — a state Biden won by 10 points in 2020 — with an additiona𓃲l three percent of the population saying they remain undecided.

Internal polls conducted by the Trump camp, meanwhile, show a race that is nearly neck-and-neck, thanks in part to RFK Jr.’s support, sources said.

RFK Jr. (left), who was polling at 8% as an independent presidential candidate before he dropped out, endorsed Trump in August — bringing additional voters into the former president’s camp. Ro🐓b Schumacher / USA TODAY NE💛TWORK via Imagn Images

RFK Jr. — who was polling at 8% in New Mexico before throwing his support behind Trump in August — has moved some of his supporters to the right, wh🐽ich has helped put the state in play, sources add.

Kennedy, who now promotes the slogan “a vote for Trump is a vote for Kennedy” on his campaign materials, has also𓂃 ramped up his ad𝓀 spend in the state over the last few weeks.

🅷Trump’s support among Latino voters has jumped to 40% this year — more than double the 19% of l🎀atino voters he won in 2016. While 47% of voters in New Mexico are Hispanic, which means the so-called Land of Enchantment is seeing a dramatic shift in polling, voters all across Southwestern border states are undergoing a transformation.

Donald Trump’s popularity with Latino voters has more than doubled since 2016. Getty Images

Catalina Miranda, a 26-year-old Tucson, Arizona, auto industry worker with family in the border town of Nogales, said she is voting for Trump because “a lot of Republican values align with Mexican values.”

And Erika Moreno, an El Paso, Texas, mother who is also the small owner of an online furniture store, said she will vote for Trump come November. An immigrant from Mexico who arrived in the US 24 years ago, she is fed up with the Biden-Harris administration for the countless ille♊gal migrants who have filled her city’s downtown st✃reets and turned it into a dangerous place for native customers.

“Folks are angry at her [Harris] here because people don’t want to come shop at the st𓂃ores for fear of being assaulted, for people sleeping 𝕴on the streets. Our taxes are paying for migrants to live in hotels,” Moreno said. “If Harris could not be a good border czar, how can she guide the whole country?”

Kamala Harris is polling just three points higher than Donald Trump in New Mexico — a much smaller margin than the 10 points Joe Biden won the state by. AP

In 2024, New Mexico had the highest violent crime rate of any state in the US, with 781 incidents per 100,000 people — more than double the nati🃏onal average.

“Biden won handily in 2020 because he ran as a centrist, but as Harris gets exposed as a far left candidate, that will move voters,” McClesky added.

“New Mexico has shifted blue but it’s not liberal or progressive … especially with respect to the border and crime,” he added. “Albuquerque [the most populous city in the state] voters in particular are focused on crime.”

Additional reporting by Joseph Treviño