Santa Fe New Mexican

Congressional candidate profile: Ben Ray Luján

CORRALES — In the mellow, sun-dappled New Mexico afternoon, someone suggests Ben Ray Luján take a seat on the hay ride during the Corrales Harvest Festival.

To that idea, the 36-year-old says he could actually drive the tractor that's pulling the wagon loaded with festival-goers.

Luján, a member of the Public Regulation Commission, makes the offhand comment in jest.

But in a way, the line is a key part of the Democrat's approach on the campaign trail: convince voters he can go from rural New Mexico to the beltway — without forgetting his tractor-driving, Nambé roots.

In the end, Luján doesn't drive or ride behind the tractor. With roasting green chile wafting heavily in the air, he shakes some hands in the area at the southern edge of the 3rd Congressional District and heads off to a town hall in nearby Rio Rancho.

It doesn't take long before Luján is all policy, talking health care, energy and education with a clearly supportive audience and friends who present easy questions and offer plenty of compliments. He works again later to tie himself back to his beginnings, talking about growing up in a rural community north of Santa Fe.

The day — which started with a breakfast in Cuba and then a sparsely attended outdoor rally in San Felipe Pueblo — is a typical one on the campaign trail for Luján. Son of House Speaker Ben Luján, he now seems a natural, flowing from handshake to handshake, easily asserting the key points of his campaign in front of crowds.

The ease with which he campaigns now is different from how it was in the six-way primary race, during which Ben Ray Luján at times seemed nervous, stiff.

Plenty of practice out in the expanses of the district apparently has helped. "Getting an opportunity to travel the district, I guess you learn every day," he said when asked about his campaign style.

After he emerged the victor in the primary, Ben Ray Luján's outlook, too, appears to have changed. Like the other candidates, he talks about what he'll do when he's elected. And he knows what committees he'd like to serve on, what topics he'd like to work on most in Congress.

There is a reason for his confidence.

So far, Ben Ray Luján is the favorite in the race, according to a recent Albuquerque Journal poll, which gave him 41 percent, but he says he's not counting out his competitors. Even though Republican Dan East and Independent Carol Miller trailed well behind, 27 percent were undecided or wouldn't say, according to the poll done Sept. 29 to Oct. 2.

With the most name identification in the race, Ben Ray Luján also is the magnet for the most criticism.

An anonymous flyer circulated last week suggesting an investigation be launched into a campaign e-mail apparently sent from the computer of a state employee during work hours.

Ben Ray Luján said he didn't know the employee sent e-mail on work time and canceled an event that was mentioned in the mail to show he doesn't condone what happened.

Detractors also have suggested he isn't qualified to represent New Mexico on Capitol Hill.

Ben Ray Luján graduated from Pojoaque High School 1990. In the 18 years since, he has shot to one of the state's highest-paying elected jobs: Public Regulation Commission member. Elected in 2004, he started the $90,000-a-year job in 2005, serving as chairman from 2005 through 2007.

After high school, he took some introductory classes at The University of New Mexico, and last year finally completed his college degree at New Mexico Highlands University in Las Vegas.

Along the way, he has worked as a casino dealer, in human resources at a race track, in the State Treasurer's Office under Michael Montoya and at the Cultural Affairs Department. He served as deputy state treasurer, but he wasn't implicated in the kickback scandal that led to prison time for Montoya and Montoya's successor, state Treasurer Robert Vigil.

Ben Ray Luján points to his experience at the commission as experience that qualifies him for Capitol Hill. "The work I've done on the commission, the hearing process, bringing counsel in and (chief executive officers) in and looking them in the eye and holding them accountable," he said. "The rule-making process, working with colleagues, going through large amounts of hearings and filings ... all of my experience at the PRC will allow me to hit the ground running."

During the campaign, he has emphasized his willingness to stand up to company executives. He recently asked for a study of the salaries of companies including the Public Service Company of New Mexico. The commission's general counsel is reviewing the information collected by the PRC, he said this week.

On the campaign trail, Ben Ray Luján has repeated lines about his willingness to stand up to big companies regulated by the PRC including PNM and Qwest.

When asked for comment about the company's dealings with him during recent cases — which include a rate increase sought by the utility — a PNM representative declined to comment.

A spokesman for Qwest, which tussled with the commission over how much it should be required to invest in the state's infrastructure, said the telecommunications company wished Ben Ray Luján luck in his race, but didn't comment on its dealings with him.

The commission in 2007 ordered Qwest to credit a total of $15 million to customers as part of a December 2006 settlement. The settlement stemmed from a 2001 regulatory agreement in which Qwest had agreed to spend $788 million on the state's telecommunications system but came up about $220 million short. The 2006 settlement, under which Qwest is spending about $270 million for the customer credits, additional high-speed service and other improvements, ended litigation between the company and the commission.

Like the other candidates, Ben Ray Luján has plenty more packed days between now and the election.

So what keeps him up during the grueling campaign hours?

It's the stories he hears on the campaign trail, the people he meets, he says. "When you get a chance to share those stories, that's what gets me through this."

Contact Kate Nash at 986-3036 or knash@sfnewmexican.com. Read her blog, Green Chile Chatter, at www.santafenewmexican.com.



BEN RAY LUJáN JR., DEMOCRAT

Family: Single; son of state House Speaker Ben Luján and Carmen Luján; one brother and two sisters

Hometown: Nambé

Education: New Mexico Highlands University, bachelor's degree in business administration with an emphasis in management, 2007

Age: 36

Years in New Mexico: I was born and raised in New Mexico.

Occupation: Member of Public Regulation Commission

Have you ever been arrested for, convicted of, charged with or accused of a felony or misdemeanor? No.

Have you or any company you've owned or own ever filed a bankruptcy petition?

Best meal you can cook from scratch: Green chile chicken enchiladas

Name the last book you read: I recently re-read Bless Me, Ultima by Rudolfo Anaya.

What alternative energy programs do you use, either in your car, at your home or at your work? My car is a hybrid, and I make sure we practice energy efficiency at the campaign office and at my PRC office.

Name the last charity for which you volunteered. I handed out compact fluorescent lightbulbs with the Sierra Club after working with the club to initiate their lightbulb exchange.

What role, if any, does spirituality play in your life? My faith is very important to me and helps me make every decision with integrity and the good of others in mind.

When was the last election in which you didn't vote? I missed a vote on a school bond issue about a month ago because I was out of town at a Public Regulation Commission meeting and a series of meetings in Albuquerque.

What kind of car do you drive in New Mexico? Mercury Mariner hybrid

Campaign Web site: www.benrlujan.com



Republican candidate Dan East
Democratic candidate Ben Ray Lujan
Independent candidate Carol Miller
Video Interviews by Kate Nash/The New Mexican