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Sherry Robinson Commentary

My friend and long-time colleague Harold Morgan passed away last month. Harold started writing for this small syndicate in 2004.

He spent a career in numbers as founding editor of New Mexico Business Journal and Sunwest Bankโ€™s chronicler of New Mexicoโ€™s economy, although he once wrote, โ€œGrains of salt should be issued with the first unveiling of all numbers. Full salt tablets should come with more complex numbers.โ€ He loved wading into data in a search. As a tribute to Harold, Iโ€™d like to share some excerpts from his 17-plus years of columns.

In his first column on Feb. 4, 2004, he reported state job numbers: โ€œItโ€™s a performance just above mediocre and nowhere close to the claim, promoted in August by Gov. Bill Richardsonโ€™s staff, as โ€˜one of the most dramatic economic turnarounds in U.S. history.โ€™”

A year later, he pierced the โ€œtax-cut brouhahaโ€ in the Legislature. Tax cuts were โ€œoffset by the Richardson administrationโ€™s long list of tax and fee increases.โ€ This sword cut both ways. In 2017 he punctured Gov. Susana Martinez administrationโ€™s claim that they cut taxes 37 times by looking at each bill. He concluded, โ€œWith a few exceptions, the much celebrated tax cuts, overall, mean little to the state.โ€

Harold, an admirer of the late Republican Sen. Pete Domenici,โ€ sadly reported in October 2007 that Domenici โ€œdeparts the New Mexico political scene with grace and dignity, the same way he has served for 35 years as United States Senator.โ€

Domenici was frank about the incurable brain disease that forced his retirement. โ€œConfronting mortality is somewhere between strange and unpleasant for any individual,โ€ Harold wrote. โ€œDoing so in public, in front of television cameras, adds dimensions difficult to comprehend.โ€

Harold followed economic development closely. In 2011 he skewered Gov. Martinez and her economic development secretary whose only proposals were recruiting companies to the state. โ€œRecruiting is good and necessary, but for that to be the only topic massively misses the point,โ€ he wrote. Recruiting had no impact on the smallest communities.

That year Harold surprised everyone: โ€œLegalize marijuana. There! I said it! In public! Conservative me!โ€ His reason was that โ€œthe social costs of legal marijuana, however high, would be less than the social costs of illegal marijuana.โ€ He meant that illegal weed brought otherwise law-abiding citizens into contact with criminals. โ€œIn my brief, long ago marijuana flirtation, my supplier was a Washington-based federal prosecutor. This nicely defines the potential for societal rot.โ€

In 2012 Harold wrote that Martinezโ€™s thin agenda lacked values. โ€œRepublicans must bring a framework of values to the conversation.โ€ Run articulate Republicans for office, starting with grassroots positions. โ€œBut, remember, ground everything in values. Dump the extremism.โ€

Harold was the only business writer I knew who followed population growth. When he reported in 2014 that New Mexico topped 2 million people, he added that since 2011 more people had left New Mexico than had moved here. Why? Economic downturns and nonexistent job growth.

Civility was a regular subject. Deb Haaland, then Democratic Party chairwoman, said in 2016 that Martinezโ€™s policy priorities were โ€œexactly in line with the reckless and racist priorities of Trump and other Republican candidates.โ€ Harold responded, โ€œWhile itโ€™s tough to argue Donald Trump is anything other than reckless and racist, pasting that label on Martinez is hardly civil.โ€ He added, โ€œRepublicans say the same stupid stuff.โ€

When Steve Pearce announced his run for governor in 2017, Harold wrote: โ€œI like Steve Pearce.โ€ But he wondered if Pearce could win a statewide general election. โ€œFor sure he will be toast if he only presents voters the standard list of right-wing talking points.โ€

Haroldโ€™s last column was June 28, 2021. He stepped down for medical treatment and then decided to devote himself to a book on New Mexicoโ€™s uranium industry.

Nobody else covered the stateโ€™s economy in such depth and gusto.

Pat Davis is the founder and publisher of nm.news. In a prior life he served as an Albuquerque City Councilor.

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