A. A voter may, on the voter's own initiative and using whatever form of communication or media chosen by the voter, voluntarily communicate any information regarding:(1) the name of any candidate in a candidate contest for whom the voter voted or for whom the voter abstained from voting;(2) the affirmative or negative vote cast by the voter on a ballot question or nonpartisan judicial retention election; or (3) any other information regarding the manner in which a voter marked a paper ballot in an election.B. No person shall solicit a voter to show the voter's marked paper ballot or coerce a voter to reveal any of the information listed in Subsection A of this section.C. No person shall disclose without the consent of the voter any of the information listed in Subsection A of this section.D. A violation of Subsection B or C of this section may constitute the crime of offering a bribe, coercion of employees, coercion of voters, intimidation or conspiracy to violate the Election Code. History: 1953 Comp., § 3-12-93, enacted by Laws 1977, ch. 222, § 62; 2009, ch. 150, § 24; 2019, ch. 212, § 116. employees, coercion of voters, intimidation or conspiracy to violate the Election Code. History: 1953 Comp., § 3-12-93, enacted by Laws 1977, ch. 222, § 62; 2009, ch. 150, § 24; 2019, ch. 212, § 116. ANNOTATIONSThe 2019 amendment, effective April 3, 2019, authorized voters to disclose information on their ballot, and prohibited the disclosure of information on a ballot without the voter's consent; added a new Subsection A; in Subsection B, after 'paper ballot', added 'or coerce a voter to reveal any of the information listed in Subsection A of this section.'; and added Subsections C and D. The 2009 amendment, effective June 19, 2009, deleted the first sentence 'Only the presiding judge shall receive from any voter an emergency paper ballot prepared by such voter'; after 'No person shall', deleted 'examine or'; and after 'voter to show', deleted 'his emergency' and added the remainder of the sentence.
New Mexico Legal Code