By a six-vote margin, New Mexico state Rep. Melanie Stansbury won the Democratic nomination Wednesday in the special election to replace former Rep. Deb Halaand, a major step in securing the heavily Democratic 1st District seat.
Stansbury defeated law professor and state Sen. Antoinette Sedillo López, 103 votes to 97 votes, in a runoff decided by members of New Mexico Democrats’ State Central Committee. Eight candidates competed on the first day of balloting Tuesday.
Stansbury will face Republican state Sen. Mark Moores, a former University of New Mexico football player, in a June 1 special election.
A former science educator, Stansbury worked in the White House Office of Management and Budget during the Obama administration and on the staff of Washington Sen. Maria Cantwell, when she was the top Democrat on the Energy and Natural Resources Committee.
After her return to New Mexico, Stansbury defeated a seven-term Republican incumbent to become the first woman to represent her legislative district.
“I flipped a red district, unseating a seven-term Republican because I know New Mexico, I know the system, and I know the science,” she wrote in a March 28 tweet.
Haaland resigned earlier this month after being confirmed as the first Native American secretary of the interior. She won reelection by 17 points in November.
The 1st District, which contains Albuquerque and is the only urban district in the state, backed Joe Biden over Donald Trump by 23 points last fall.
Inside Elections with Nathan L. Gonzales rates the special election "Solid Democratic."