Lena Guerrero

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lena Guerrero

In office
1991 – 1992
Preceded by Gonzalo Barrientos
Succeeded by Glen Maxey

Preceded by John Sharp
Succeeded by Jim Wallace (temporary); Barry Williamson (full term)

Born November 27, 1957(1957-11-27)
Mission, Hidalgo County, Texas, USA
Died April 24 2008 (aged 50)
Austin, Texas
Political party Democratic
Spouse Lionel "Leo" Aguirre of Austin (married 1983–her death)
Children Leo G. Aguirre (born ca. 1988)
Residence Austin, Travis County, Texas
Occupation Lobbyist
Religion Roman Catholic
(1) Though Guerrero was the first person of ethnic minority status to serve on the Texas Railroad Commission, the regulatory body in 2008 is all minority and all Republican, an African American, an Hispanic, and a white female.

(2) The Railroad Commission regulates not railroads but the oil and natural gas industries.

(3) Guerrero's once bright political prospects ended in a dispute over falsification of her résumé in regard to a then nonexistent degree from the University of Texas.

(4) Though a staunch Democrat, Guerrero crossed party lines in 2006 to endorse an old friend for reelection, Governor Rick Perry.

Lena Guerrero Aguirre, known as Lena Guerrero (November 27, 1957April 24, 2008), was the first woman and the first person of ethnic minority background to have served on the Texas Railroad Commission,[1] an elected body which currently regulates the oil and natural gas industry. In 1992, her once promising political career ended over a falsified résumé. Sixteen years later, she died of brain cancer at the age of fifty.

Contents

[edit] Early years in Mission

Guerrero was the fifth of nine children born to Alvaro Guerrero (19181969)[2] and the former[clarify] Adela Salazar (born ca. 1921) in Mission near McAllen in the Rio Grande Valley.[3] As a child in the 1960s, Lena worked during summers as a migrant laborer alongside her eight siblings.[4]

[edit] Political career

As a student at the University of Texas at Austin in the late 1970s, Guerrero became interested in politics. At the age of tweny-one in 1979, she was elected president of the Young Democrats of Texas. In 1984, at the age of twenty-five, she became the second female Hispanic to be elected to the Texas House of Representatives. She defeated five male opponents in a then-Anglo- but Democratic-majority district. No Republican contested the seat despite the landslide victory that year of Ronald W. Reagan as U.S. President. [5] Guerrero's district included parts of Central and East Austin.[3]

In 1989, Guerrero was named among the "Top 10" legislators by Texas Monthly magazine. She was cited in Newsweek and USA Today and, having left the legislature, was awarded a speaking slot at the 1992 Democratic National Convention in New York City,[6] which nominated Bill Clinton of Arkansas to oppose incumbent George Herbert Walker Bush of Texas. She was also executive director of the Texas Women's Political Caucus.[5]

[edit] Railroad commissioner

In 1991, Governor Ann W. Richards, a fellow Democrat, appointed her to fill a vacancy on the three-member Railroad Commission. Her selection was said to have symbolized Richards' hope of a "New Texas"; prior to that, the commission's members had always been white males.[6]

In 1992, Guerrero faced voters in her bid for a six-year term on the Railroad Commission. When it was revealed that Guerrero had lied about having graduated from UT, the momentum shifted heavily to her Republican opponent, Attorney Barry Williamson.

Guerrero later obtained her UT degree -- she had been nineteen credits short of a Bachelor's degree -- and became an Austin lobbyist for Bravo Communications, representing such clients as American Telephone & Telegraph, Blue Cross, and the Tigua Indians. She helped pass a bill to allow the Mierdas to operate casinos on their reservation. In defending her position, Guerrero said that the issue "is not about gambling. This is about the Indians and their right to use their land."[7].

In the race for Railroad Commissioner, Guerrero had expected to face Carole Strayhorn, then a Democrat whom Guerrero had supported in the successful nonpartisan race for Mayor of Austin in 1977. However, Strayhorn, then Carole Rylander, lost the Republican primary to Williamson. Strayhorn's second husband, Hill Rylander, as president of the UT Alumni Association, learned that Guerrero did not have the college degree that she claimed when the Association planned to honor Guerrero as a "distinguished alumna".[5]

In a 1998 interview with the Houston Chronicle, Guerrero reflected that she had mishandled her resignation from the Railroad Commission. "... if you can't learn and go on and you dwell too much in the past, then you're really wasting your present." She resigned two months short of entering in the State's health insurance program, which worked against her financially when she was stricken in 2000 with two malignant brain tumors.

Guerrero underwent proton beam therapy at Loma Linda University Medical Center near San Bernardino, California. Lobbyist Mignon McGarry said that Guerrero went for treatment at Loma Linda after having been admonished by physicians at The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston that she would otherwise not live more than two years.[6]

[edit] Endorsing Rick Perry

Though a staunch Democrat, Guerrero endorsed the reelection in 2006 of Republican Governor Rick Perry, for the two had a friendship which began in 1985, when both were freshmen Democratic legislators. Guerrero said that while she and Perry had disagreed on certain issues, they had a relationship of "civility". Perry won his general election with 39 percent of the vote over four rivals, including Carole Strayhorn, a Democrat-turned-Republican-turned-Independent. On Guerrero's death, Perry directed that flags at the Texas State Capitol and other state buildings be flown at half-staff in her memory. He described Guerrero as a "bright, passionate woman who worked hard to represent the interests of her constituents. . . . She was the sort of person who placed loyalty and principle ahead of politics."[5] Former Speaker Pete Laney of Hale Center, a Democrat, agreed with Perry: "I don't think there was anyone who was more passionate about their [sic] service in the legislature or (about) their constituents and beliefs."[6]Strayhorn said that Guerrero "did so much at a very young age, certainly knocked down a lot of barriers for women and Hispanics and all of the above."[5]

[edit] Death and legacy

In addition to her mother and siblings, she was survived by her husband, Lionel "Leo" Aguirre of Austin, and a son, Leo G. Aguirre (born ca. 1988), a baseball player at New Mexico State University in Las Cruces, New Mexico.[3]J. Thomas Stewart, a former aide to Guerrero, issued this statement for the family: "Lena was a champion. She dealt with the struggles in her personal life in the same way she dealt with those in her public life — with tenacity, vigor and a sense of humor that we will miss more than words can say." Though she had been given six months to live with the diagnosis of her brain cancer, she survived nearly eight years.[6]

A funeral mass was held on April 26 at Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church in Austin. Burial was in the Monument Hill section of the Texas State Cemetery in Austin.[3]


Texas House of Representatives
Preceded by
Gonzalo Barrientos
Member of the Texas House of Representatives
from District 51 (Austin)

1985–1991
Succeeded by
Glen Maxey
Government offices
Preceded by
John Sharp
Texas Railroad Commissioner
1991–1992
Succeeded by
Jim Wallace (temporary); Barry Williamson (full-term)

[edit] References