In The Community
It’s Election Day in Texas
In Texas, everything is bigger - even the elections, where progressives are looking to implement an “out with the old, in with the new” mentality and policies as they face off against their more moderate or conservative counterparts for public office. Enter Jessica Cisneros, Rochelle Garza, and Celia Israel - three progressive candidates looking to switch the historically conservative state to something more modern.
Jessica Cisneros came riding in with the sunrise against Democratic incumbent House Rep. Henry Cuellar (TX-28), who has held his seat in the heavily gerrymandered district since 2005. Cisneros, a 28-year-old immigration attorney endorsed by progressive groups like Planned Parenthood Action Fund and Working Families Party and leaders including Senator Bernie Sanders, Senator Elizabeth Warren, and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, certainly rocked the boat since she announced her bid for the seat back in 2019.
Though she didn’t win against the anti-abortion Cuellar in 2020, this year is a very different outcome with runoff elections scheduled to be held today, Tuesday May 24th, after the primary election back in March left the Latino-majority district with less than one thousand votes between the two candidates prompting a run-off.
Photo courtesy of Jessica Cisneros for Congress
Cueller losing his House seat could potentially mark a bigger turn of the tide towards electing more progressive Democrats, especially with the threat of Roe v. Wade being overturned by the Supreme Court looming over Texan women. Maintaining abortion access has been elevated as a priorty issue for pro-choice candidates running for public office - and it could be the one that hands progressives the win in Texas House District 28.
Nationally, candidates running on progressive platforms won more elections than their traditionally moderate counterparts.
Rochelle Garza’s bid for Texas Attorney General is based on the same progressive ideals - the 37-year old ACLU attorney successfully fought against the Trump administration’s attempt at blocking a teenager in ICE custody a right to an abortion in JD v. Azar, leading to the creation of the “Garza Notice” that informs teenagers held in immigration custody their right to an accessible abortion. Garza presents a real threat to Republican incumbent Ken Paxton, whose self proclaimed “Tea Party Conservative” identification has held reproductive rights for Texans hostage since his win in 2015 and is currently in his own Republican run-off.
Although the Attorney General candidate has never run for public office, Garza led the Democratic election primary held on March 1 with an impressive 43% of the vote while opponent Joe Jaworski received 19.7%. Despite the clear lead, at least 50% of the vote must be earned by one candidate to win the primary and avoid a run-off.
On this election Tuesday in Texas, it appears that Garza is the clear favorite to win among Democrats, who will then be tasked with running state-wide to potentially take on Republican incumbent Ken Paxton or his opponent, Texas Land Commissioner George P. Bush. The slate will be set when polls close at 7:00pm.
Texas State Representative Celia Israel (TX-D-50) is also making history with her announcement for Austin city mayor. If she wins, she will become the first Latina Mayor of a major U.S. city. Israel has held her seat in the Texas House of Representatives since 2014, making her bid for Austin city mayor one rooted in expanding her effectiveness as a public official and an aggressive housing affordability platform.
As an openly LGBTQ+ candidate, her platform is focusing on increasing the quality of life for Austin residents through transportation, housing, and affordability. As a candidate in a city that has seen housing prices skyrocket along with a large population boom as big tech companies like Google, Tesla, and more build HQs there, her issues are not only relevant but needed at a time when too many residents are being priced out of their homes.
Israel is slated to potentially run against a variety of candidates, mostly notably former Austin mayor Kirk Watson. The filing deadline is August 22, 2022 and the general election is November 8th, 2022.
Photo courtesy of Celia for Austin
With so many excellent candidates, we can only hope the amount of Latinas we’re seeing run for office across the nation continues to grow. With 30 million + Latinas in the U.S., we are still woefully underrepresented, but these three Latinas are helping to forge the path ahead.
If you need help finding a polling location, click here. Remember that Texas Republicans have made voting incredibly difficult so take all your documentation that you have available. For example, for many who just moved to the state and are registered, but don’t have a Texas ID, a U.S. passport is usually one of the only acceptable documents left. These are the 7 acceptable forms of identification in Texas to vote:
Texas Driver License issued by the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS)
Texas Election Identification Certificate issued by DPS
Texas Personal Identification Card issued by DPS
Texas Handgun License issued by DPS
United States Military Identification Card containing the person’s photograph
United States Citizenship Certificate containing the person’s photograph
United States Passport (book or card)
Polls close across the the state at 7:00pm.
The Rio Grande, which sits right at the border between Texas and Mexico, has at least 700 different types of fish, reptiles, birds, and mammals, plus 300 species of butterflies, and at least 18 threatened or endangered species. It's safe to say that it's a natural habitat that's overflowing with wildlife and an easy target for environmental protection. It's now become an easy political target for right-wing extremists.
The National Butterfly Center is a sanctuary where more than 200 butterfly species are found. It has also been in a legal battle since 2017 with the former Trump Administration and the anti-immigrant group We Build The Wall over their plans to build the infamous wall that would separate the U.S and Mexico. Senior leaders of We Build the Wall are now under federal investigation for pillaging millions of dollars for themselves while only routing an estimated 5% of their multi-million dollar budget on the actual wall-building.
The Center has said that building any portion of the wall would significantly damage the environment and potentially harm numerous endangered species. However, despite only small parts of the wall being built, more extensive damage remains. The Center became a target of harassment from right-wing extremists when We Build the Wall co-founder Brian Kolfage claimed the Center was being used for child trafficking. The planted conspiracy theory inspired extreme harassment of employees and Center financial donors to the point where they were forced to shut down to keep their employees safe from credible threats.
We appreciate y'all chipping in to help us r/n! You're helping to cover staff wages, while closed; hire professional security consultants & acquire essential equipment, training & assets to re-open w/measures in place should the nutjobs return to menace. http://PayPal.me/butterflies\u00a0pic.twitter.com/GadMErzTPe— National Butterfly (@National Butterfly) 1643980408
The North American Butterfly Association released a statement on Wednesday announcing that the Center's doors would be closed until authorities give the green light to safely re-open. They continued, "The safety of our staff and visitors is our primary concern," said Jeffrey Glassberg, NABA's president, and founder.
We regret to announce National Butterfly Center will be closed to the public for the immediate future. This difficult decision was made by the board of directors of the North American Butterfly Association, in the wake of recent events targeting the us. https://mailchi.mp/nationalbutterflycenter/v4jla7bmp9-5536765?e=73e95bd914\u00a0\u2026— National Butterfly (@National Butterfly) 1643816845
As conspiracy theories and disinformation runs rampant, accountability for the violence that's inspired by these politically motivated lies remains elusive.
Standing on the steps of the Brewster County Courthouse in Alpine, Texas, Daedrien “Dae” Houston-Leyva told the crowd at the Black Lives Matter (BLM) rally on June 6 about “the talk” she received in fifth grade. Not the one about the birds and the bees, but the one that prepares Black kids for how to be safe in public.
“It is going to be hard,” Houston-Leyva told the crowd, recalling what her parents told her. “You need to know that you need to always be on your guard. Don’t drive around with your music too high. Don’t draw attention to yourself. If you get pulled over, make sure to have your ID [within] hands reach. Obey everything that the officer tells you to do. Do not resist. Don’t raise your voice. Don’t talk Black. Don’t move too fast. Stay as calm as possible. Make sure you get your phone call if you end up in jail. Don’t give them a reason to kill you. You need to stay alive for Mommy.”
Houston-Leyva is one of the few Black women to grow up in Alpine, the rural West Texas town that has less than 6,000 people. Her mom is Latina and her dad is Black and she self-identifies as Afro-Latina. Gina Leyva, Houston-Leyva’s mom, told Luz Collective that she and Houston-Leyva’s dad made the conscious decision when she was pregnant to raise their interractial daughter knowing both cultures. “We weren’t going to be divided,” said Levya. “We were going to come together and raise an interracial child together with my Hispanic culture and [his] African culture.”
Sarah M. Vasquez
Latinos make up 46 percent of Alpine’s population and Black people make up less than one percent. President Donald Trump won Brewster County with 48 percent of the votes in 2016. Alpine is a college town with Sul Ross State University, named after the 19th Governor of Texas who was also a Confederate general.
Houston-Leyva said she never had it rough growing up as a Black person in Alpine, but looking back, she realized that she experienced microaggressions in her everyday life from both the White and the Latinx communities. “I’ve heard it all,” Houston-Levya told Luz Collective in a series of recent interviews. She heard people stereotyping Black people, asking why are they always “ghetto.” She heard the frequent use of the n-word from a Latino resident, who also told her that she wasn’t that because she was “smart and only half [Black].” Houston-Leyva shared in her speech that people have assumed she was good at sports or that she listened to hip hop, which she informed the crowd were racist assumptions.
Pushback on this kind of racism is starting to emerge. There’s currently an online petition to remove Devon Portillo, the Republican challenger from the ballot for Brewster County Sheriff after racist tweets including the n-word surfaced earlier this month. But growing up in this environment also led Houston-Leyva to internalize the racism around her, including a time when she hated herself for being biracial. “I would question myself why,” said Houston-Leyva. “I would pick on other Black kids and other Black kids would pick on me,”
Over 300 people marched under the blazing Texas sun and listened to speeches at the courthouse on June 6. It was one of the smaller demonstrations happening around the world in response to the murder of George Floyd, one of the many Black people who has been killed while in police custody, but has garnered national attention with mentions in the New York Times and The Rachel Maddow Show.
Before the Alpine protest, Houston-Leyva cried as she saw the protests in larger cities like Austin and San Antonio, because she felt like she couldn’t do anything in her rural town. She signed online petitions, gave donations, and attended a candlelight vigil at the Presidio County Courthouse in Marfa. At the vigil, she and her mom joined the small crowd wearing masks and practicing social distancing as they listened to two songs by Nina Simone and a short speech.
Shortly afterwards, Houston-Leyva joined a Facebook group created by a few Alpine residents who were organizing a protest for the following weekend, which led to one of the organizers asking her to speak at the protest. At first she was excited, but then a public Facebook thread revealed threatening comments towards the protesters that included the phrases “get a rope” and “lock n load,” and assumptions that there would be civil unrest during the 9:30 am protest. “I started getting nervous once we got those threats because I was like something could happen,” said Houston-Leyva. “I was worried about the other speakers. I didn’t know how many people were going to be there. I was worried about people just standing on the side of the street with big machine guns and stuff.”
At one point, she thought maybe she shouldn’t speak at the rally, but then she told herself that she had to do it as one of the few Black people in Alpine. Thankfully, the protest remained peaceful. A few people wearing red MAGA hats watched the march pass by, and one guy interrupted a speech with cries of “it’s conspiracy theories, not racism.” The crowd responded by chanting “I love you” at him. The hardest day for Houston-Leyva was the day before the event. It was her birthday as well as the birthday of Breonna Taylor, a Black woman who was fatally shot in her home by Louisville police officers during a now illegal no-knock search warrant. “It was just a lot, and I had to get there emotionally,” siad Houston-Leyva. “I had a couple breakdowns. I cried. I was really worried. But when I got up there, I looked at everybody and I knew that I had to do this.”
It was when she left to study in San Antonio a few years ago that Houston-Leyva realized there was a racism problem in Alpine. She saw more diversity and people from other races and cultures attending her school. “It opened my mind, but it was like, wow,” said Houston-Leyva. “Looking back at it, it’s like I was hearing all this negative stuff about these people and they’re nothing like that.”
Houston-Leyva said Alpine is like a little fantasy world where everybody is set in their ways. “They’re more worried about what people are going to think instead of what’s right,” she said. In her speech, she shared a story that she hadn’t told many people, not even her mom, about a sleepover in elementary school. Two of her white friends were making plans for an out-of-town trip in front of her and a Hispanic friend. “My Hispanic friend and I were baffled and wondering why not us? Why don’t we get to go with you? When we asked why [we] couldn’t go, the little girl replied, ‘Because I am white,’” recalled Houston-Leyva.
Sarah M. Vasquez
The crowd was silent after hearing her story, but she shared it because she wanted her neighbors to realize that racism exists everywhere. “Saying my speech here, it hit home because they watched me grow up,” said Houston-Leyva. “I didn’t talk about my issues publicly, only with my family, and I think that made people realize like ‘Oh, wow. Dae is affected by this.’”
During the march, she saw a little girl holding hands with her mom. It reminded Houston-Leyva of her younger self, and that’s when she realized that it was important for her to speak her truth about racism. “I’m doing it for her because I don’t need her to go through what I went through,” said Houston-Leyva. “I don’t know who she is, but she gave me that courage. She gave me that strength and she doesn’t even know it.”