The statement
Richardson

"I used tax cuts to help create over 80,000 jobs in New Mexico."

Bill Richardson on Thursday, May 10th, 2007 in a TV Ad.

Richardson takes credit for new jobs

Mostly true

Statistics from the Bureau of Labor Statistics indicate that New Mexico gained 75,800 jobs from December 2002 to July 2007, which is slightly lower than Richardson's claim.

As our friends at FactCheck.org note in this article, Richardson has consistently cited the higher number, even when the actual number was lower.

For our ruling, however, we'll rely on the current 75,800 and call it mostly true.

It’s difficult to calculate how big a role his tax cuts played in getting businesses to create those jobs.

James Peach, an economics professor at New Mexico State University, said many factors make a company decide to add jobs and that tax incentives often play only a modest role. Indeed, much of the job growth in the state began before Richardson became governor, Peach said.

Still, Peach said Richardson’s tax incentives and income tax cuts have created a favorable atmosphere for business that is a stark change from the state’s mentality in the mid-1970s, when state officials refused to provide help to a promising young company named Microsoft.

“The climate here has changed considerably since then,” Peach said. “Bill Richardson has been a big part of that. He’s not the whole story, but he’s been a big part of it.”

Advertisement
Bookmark this
About this statement

Sources: New Mexico Department of Labor, June 2007 Employment News Release

New Mexico Governor's Office, Governor announces fourth year of tax cuts

Albuquerque Journal, New Mexico Rising: The new jobs appearing in the state pay better than previous years, April 26, 2007

Interviews: James Peach, New Mexico State University; Gabriel Sanchez, University of New Mexico; Lee Reynis, Director of the Bureau of Business and Economic Research, University of New Mexico, Gerry Bradley, NM Voices for Children.

Written by: Bill Adair
Researched by: Lea Iadarola
Edited by: Scott Montgomery

Articles about this statement:
Richardson claims on N.M. accomplishments largely true

Contribute

No, we don’t want to take your money. But we are more than willing to listen if you know of any facts or story ideas for the Truth-O-Meter. truthometer@politifact.com

PolitiFact.com

PolitiFact is a project of the St. Petersburg Times and Congressional Quarterly to help you find the truth in the presidential campaign. Every day, reporters and researchers from the Times and CQ will analyze the candidates' speeches, TV ads and interviews and determine whether the claims are accurate. >> More

Logos
Sorting out the truth in politics
Browse
Candidates

Search PolitiFact via Google

Feeds

Get PolitiFact:

Advertisement