Serving the High Plains

Udall's presence in delegation will be missed

It’s hard to imagine New Mexico without Tom Udall in elected office.

Nearly 30 years have passed since the now-70-year-old was first voted in as New Mexico’s attorney general. He went on to win a seat in New Mexico’s 3rd Congressional District in 1998, was elected to the U.S. Senate in 2014 and is currently the most senior member of the state’s Congressional delegation.

Udall’s announcement last week he will leave the Senate in 2020 at the end of his current term puts a period on government service for the “Kennedys of the West” — Udall is the son of an Interior secretary, nephew of a congressman and cousin of a senator. Within hours of his announcement there was a flurry of speculation about who might make a run at his seat.

What’s for sure is the New Mexico delegation — whose next most senior member is 47-year-old Sen. Martin Heinrich — will sorely miss Udall’s institutional knowledge, measured responses and upstanding reputation. (And also his powerful perch on the Senate Appropriations Committee.)

What he has accomplished in the past 29 years are the fruits of head-down, no-fuss toil — using pragmatism and even temperament while avoiding the scandal and posturing now seemingly trademarks of public office.

Among the highlights:

n Taking a lead to right environmental wrongs, demanding the EPA address its Gold King Mine spill and the Air Force its water contamination at bases in New Mexico and “ensure the safe water every single family, rancher and farmer deserves.”

n Preaching caution and restraint in U.S. military involvement in the Middle East.

n Calling for the audit that helped reveal atrocious mismanagement at the Albuquerque Veterans Affairs Medical Center, which forced vets to wait months for medical care, as well as the cover-up that had allowed administrators to avoid consequences.

n Creating a national registry for service members and veterans exposed to toxic chemicals and fumes from open-air burn pits in Iraq and Afghanistan.

n Lending a voice to efforts to recognize veterans — including New Mexicans — who survived the infamous Battle of Bataan in World War II.

n Joining other New Mexico political leaders in calling for the end of the pointless, expensive and inhumane practice of biomedical testing on chimpanzees. Udall was vindicated when the National Institutes of Health began to phase out invasive testing on chimps in 2013, ultimately retiring the last group of test subjects in 2015.

n Advocating for an end to performance-enhancing drugs used on race horses.

n Supporting expedited oil and gas drilling permits in an environmentally responsible manner.

n Recommending a “do it all, do it right” approach to U.S. energy independence.

n Pushing for more disclosure in campaign financing as well as giving Congress more authority to regulate contributions and spending by independent groups in federal elections (a response to the Supreme Court’s Citizens United ruling).

n Demanding then-EPA chief Scott Pruitt comply with an investigation into spending on office furnishings. He wrote the secretary that “the American people deserve an open and transparent budget process.”

Udall has been following his conscience in the public eye for nearly three decades. He has signaled that retirement isn’t necessarily his next step, but we still get his extensive experience, knowledge and gentlemanly demeanor for 21 more months.

So the hard work’s not over yet.

— Albuquerque Journal

 
 
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