The MOMocrats welcome mom and feminist writer, Veronica Arreola, who reports on the National Council of La Raza Conference.
Last week at the National Council of La Raza conference I sat in on the "Serving, Leading & Inspiring: Latinas in Elected & Appointed Office" panel. The panelists included my former State Senator Iris Martinez (disclosure: I have donated to her campaign), State Representative Lisa Hernandez, State Representative Susana Mendoza, LA Unified School District Board President Mónica García and Elmy Bermejo, Chair of the board of HOPE, was the moderator.
The panel ended up being a story-telling session and each woman had a
different story of how they ended up being an elected official. While I
would have enjoyed more time for questions, it was great to hear each
story.
Senator Martinez was asked to run for office by a Latino elected official, current Chicago City Clerk Miguel Del Valle.
Martinez was a single mom by divorce when she ran for office. She saw
this as a positive for her because she knew that when she knocked on
doors in her neighborhood and a woman answered she would be able to
connect. She was living a similar life. After she was elected a message
was sent that back at home, we can tackle the issues we care about:
daycares, afterschool programs & the challenge of raising children
with gangs in the neighborhood. She was honest that yes it is hard to
be in the old boys club, especially in Chicago, but it's just makes
things spicy. The men do call on her and other Latinas to make things
happen. Martinez thinks that Latinas need to step up and seize the
opportunity, don't wait to be asked. We need to take that risk.
State Rep. Hernandez had been working with then-Lieutenant, now
Governor Quinn, so she had great perspective and experience before
running for office. She spoke about that feeling one gets, that she
got, just after she learned she was now an elected official -- "Oh, my,
gawd! What do I do now?" Hernandez's strength was that she truly was
connected to the community she was now representing. Her office is run
like a community center, no one is turned away and her staff is trying
to address all the issues that walk though the door. She spent a good
amount of time talking about her struggle with work/life balance. Does
she attend her son's Little League game or that townhall meeting of
constituents discussing healthcare issues? She also is learning that
she can't represent and help her community if she's not taking care of
herself.
Mónica García spoke of how the issues profiled in the movie "Walkout" (a must see!) is still an issue today. While the LAUSD board just passed a statement about having a goal of 50% graduation rate, her personal goal is 100%. García is tough about education and Latino families. She believes that Latino families must change their expectations. We need to expect that every Latino child can and will graduate from high school AND college. We need to stop pointing to Latino college graduates as exceptional. García also talked about how taking a leadership position often pits you against the community you are trying to help. She's been in board meetings where children have booed her for cutting teachers from the budget. To combat this pitting, she has taken student representatives into her office and showed them how the board and her come to their conclusions -- how the state allocates money and the board needs to make the tough decisions.
But Illinois State Representative Mendoza had the best story of them
all. She was raised by two Mexican immigrants who hated, hated
politicians. After moving back to Chicago from the suburbs, Mendoza
noticed a few mailers of a local election. She was so taken by one of
the pieces that she called the opponent and offered her advertising
skills to craft a rebuttal piece. The man asked her to come to the
office and Mendoza brought her father with - She didn't think she could
trust him. And in a classic political move, the elected official
offered to make a call to get her an interview with an advertising
agency. He didn't have the time or money to do a rebuttal piece, he
just liked her moxie. In a matter of weeks her father died suddenly,
her brother quit school to come home to help with the family, the hotel
she was working at offered her brother a job despite a hiring freeze
and then the advertising agency called to offer her a job. When she
said she couldn't accept the job because of her brother, the agency
called the elected official and soon her brother had a tuition waiver.
Within a few years, she was asked to run for office and won the second
time she ran.
While most of the women had an inside connection when they decided to
run, they certainly were not born into the business. They stumbled or
worked their way into the network where they could take the next step
into elected office.
The one question I asked, I'll leave you with to ponder. If increasing
Latino, especially Latina, representation in elected office is
important, we need to recognize that there are limited Latino-majority
districts. How do we push for more Latina representation while we need
to win Latino-minority districts? Their collective answer is to
represent the Latina/o community, but not to run as the Latina candidate.
Guest MOMocrat Veronica can be found at her blog Viva la Feminista as well as at AWEARNESS where this piece was originally posted.
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Posted by: Jason | August 06, 2009 at 11:41 AM
The difference region and history makes! I read this with great interest and contrasted the experience of these Latinas with that of Hilda Solis and her mentee-colleague, Judy Chu. (As a SoCal resident I followed happenings in CA CD-32 with tremendous interest despite not living in the district.)
Solis has made the incredible leap from Congresswoman to Labor Secretary. She represented a mostly Latino district, with some whites, Asians, and African Americans making up the rest. However, I think she's always been a coalitional representative instead of purely the "ethnic" representative--as has Chu--and the two progressive women forged a productive alliance during Solis' years as a Congresswoman and Chu's terms in the State Assembly.
I can't help but think this coalitional method grew out of their feminist women of color backgrounds & experiences. It's exciting, especially now that Congresswoman Chu represents a largely Latino--with some whites, Asians, and African Americans--district. It's examples like these, of all-kinds of cross-ethnic identifications and allegiances, that give me hope. Because the people of the district are solidly Democratic and working class. Quietly, steadily, day in, day out--they show that a community can evolve peacefully and with diversity seen as an asset.
Posted by: cynematic | August 06, 2009 at 10:22 PM
Roni -- Such a great post!! Thanks so much!
Posted by: Kristin | August 13, 2009 at 09:53 PM