Follow the Money: Why Public Financing Decides Albuquerque’s Next Mayor
Nov 04, 2025•10 min
Episode description
Mayoral Race Overview and Voting Reminder
- Election timing: Mayor’s race is “tomorrow”; anticipated runoff on December 9.
- Voting reminder: Strong encouragement to vote; clarification that Eddy Aragon is not running in this cycle and previously voted for Darren White.
- Historical turnout reference: The prior Miami mayoral cycle reportedly achieved the highest turnout ever (122,000); used as a point of pride and for comparison of engagement.
Public Financing, Viability Criteria, and Campaign Mechanics
- Public financing qualification threshold: Approximately 3,400 qualifying $5 contributions required, plus signature requirements.
- Viability assessment: Candidates failing to qualify for public financing are deemed non-viable by Eddy Aragon's criteria.
- Incumbency dynamic: Running against an incumbent mayor without qualifying for public financing is assessed as “impossible” to be competitive; public funding is seen as crucial for advancing to a runoff and demonstrating broad support.
- Cheating accusation rebuttal: Claims that the mayor “cheated” to qualify for public financing are rejected; the process was deemed consistent across candidates.
- Campaign audits: Eddy Aragon notes his personal experience of being audited during a prior race despite not receiving public money.
Runoff Projection and Vote Share Estimates
- Runoff expectation: Anticipated runoff between Tim Keller (incumbent) and Darren White.
- First-place prediction: Tim Keller projected to place first.
- Keller’s public funds: Estimated $730,000–$740,000 in public financing to be spent; required to spend all received public money.
- Keller approval and vote share estimates:
- Approval rating cited at 42%.
- Election night projections at 40%–42%; some internal campaign voices reportedly anticipate a sub-35% result.
- If Keller lands near or below 35%, a highly competitive runoff is expected.
- Darren White's financing posture: Will need to raise funds privately for the runoff; Eddy Aragon plans to assist.
- Comparative precedent: Reference to Dan Lewis vs. Tim Keller outcome eight years ago (approx. 62–38 loss for Lewis).
- Final predicted distribution:
- Tim Keller: ~42%
- Darren White: ~30%
- Alex Uballez: ~15%
- Louis Sanchez: ~15%
- Mayling Armijo: ~4%–5%
- Eddie Varela: ~1%
Candidate Evaluations and Policy Positions
Tim Keller (Incumbent)
- Resource advantage: Holds public financing; substantial funds in the $730k–$740k range.
- Performance expectation: Likely first place but possibly weaker-than-hoped margin; approval at 42%.
- Runoff implications: Receives public money for runoff as well.
Darren White (Republican)
- Eddy Aragon endorsement: Identified as “the only real Republican”; voted for him; praises debate performance (KOAT-TV).
- Campaign style: Straightforward, candid; “hard on the issues” with defined day-one actions; emphasis on confronting entrenched power.
- Policy intent: Seeks significant change in law enforcement, crime, and corruption.
Alex Uballez (Former U.S. Attorney)
- Professional attributes: A highly positive demeanor, professional presentation, and government experience.
- Ideological critique: Characterized as aligned with Mamdani-style policies, Eddy Aragon disagrees with his philosophy.
- Governance philosophy critique: Seen as focusing on assessments over decisive executive action.
- Public safety stance: Advocates for expanding community resource programs; opposed by Eddy Aragon, who argues for trained law enforcement to handle dangerous individuals.
- Homelessness policy: Criticized for wanting to discontinue the Gateway Center while failing to present a compelling alternative; the Gateway Center was labeled a boondoggle that encourages homelessness.
- Homelessness data point: When Eddy Aragon ran, there were ~3,000 unhoused individuals; the current estimate is “well over 5,000.”
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