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New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez, center, signs the Capital Outlay Bill, a spending measure that includes $89 million for critical infrastructure aimed at securing drinking water resources for communities around New Mexico, as Sen. Pete Campos (D-New Mexico), sitting right, looks on Tuesday, March 11, 2014, at Plaza Park in Las Vegas, N.M. Also looking on are various state and local officials. (AP Photo/Las Vegas Optic, Mercy López)

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New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez, left, signs the Capital Outlay Bill, a spending measure that includes $89 million for critical infrastructure aimed at securing drinking water resources for communities around New Mexico, as Sen. Pete Campos (D-New Mexico) looks on Tuesday, March 11, 2014, at Plaza Park in Las Vegas, N.M. Also looking on are various state and local officials. (AP Photo/Las Vegas Optic, Mercy López)

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New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez speaks to reporters at Puesta del Sol elementary school in Rio Rancho, N.M., before signing a $6 billion state budget on Tuesday, March 11, 2014. Gov. Martinez state budget eliminated pay raises for judges, district attorneys and appointed government workers. Martinez cut spending about $27 million with line-item vetoes, including $2.4 million that lawmakers had provided for 8 percent salary increases for judges and district attorneys and about 3 percent raises for workers in appointed government positions. (AP Photo/Russell Contreras)

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New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez signs the state's $6 billion budget Tuesday next to students at Puesta del Sol elementary in Rio Rancho, N.M., on Tuesday, March, 11, 2014. Gov. Martinez state budget eliminated pay raises for judges, district attorneys and appointed government workers. Martinez cut spending about $27 million with line-item vetoes, including $2.4 million that lawmakers had provided for 8 percent salary increases for judges and district attorneys and about 3 percent raises for workers in appointed government positions. (AP Photo/Russell Contreras)

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New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez signs the state's $6 billion budget surrounded by students at Puesta del Sol elementary school in Rio Rancho, N.M., on Tuesday March 11, 2014. Gov. Martinez state budget eliminated pay raises for judges, district attorneys and appointed government workers. Martinez cut spending about $27 million with line-item vetoes, including $2.4 million that lawmakers had provided for 8 percent salary increases for judges and district attorneys and about 3 percent raises for workers in appointed government positions. (AP Photo/Russell Contreras)

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From left, Navajo Nations delegate, LoRenzo Bates, speaks with Navajo Nations President, Ben Shelly, during a joint committee on Gaming Compacts at the State Capitol on Friday, Jan. 31, 2014 in Santa Fe, N.M. A legislative panel asked the Navajo Nation and Gov. Susana Martinez's administration on Friday to renegotiate a proposed compact to restrict the state's largest tribe to their existing casinos rather than allowing an expansion of gambling. (AP Photo/The Santa Fe New Mexican, Jane Phillips)

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New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez arrives for a press conference at Berrendo Middle School Tuesday, Jan. 14, 2014 in Roswell, N.M. A 12-year-old New Mexico boy drew a shotgun from a band-instrument case and shot and wounded two classmates at his middle school Tuesday morning before a teacher talked him into dropping the weapon and he was taken into custody, officials and witnesses said. (AP Photo/The Albuquerque Journal, Roberto Rosales) THE SANTA FE NEW MEXICAN OUT; MANDATORY CREDIT: ROBERTO ROSALES/THE ALBUQUERQUE JOURNAL

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"I thought Susana Martinez was phenomenal — I had never heard her speak before. Being a woman, having a strong woman in the Republican Party is long overdue.” - Tara Howey, 51, a lobbyist from Pittsburgh. (Associated Press)

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Gov. Susana Martinez

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"What we have to do is this: We have to tone down the rhetoric, and we have to have a sincere, honest conversation with the voters," said New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez, a Republican. (Associated Press)

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New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez