Orlando Sentinel

Latina sheriff eyes gov. job in Texas

Dems hope she motivates more Hispanics to vote

- By Molly Hennessy-Fiske

DALLAS — Guadalupe “Lupe” Valdez was making the rounds in jeans and a purple blouse on a recent Sunday at Norma’s Cafe, a popular diner packed with a diverse mix of Texans.

“Hey, sheriff!” exclaimed a Latino in a Dallas Cowboys jersey, and Valdez was soon at his side, grinning.

“I was afraid people wouldn’t recognize me without the uniform,” she said.

The week before, Valdez — the state’s first openly gay and first Latina sheriff — with almost four terms under her belt as Dallas County’s top cop — announced she was resigning to run for governor.

In a crowded Democratic primary, she’s the frontrunne­r with the potential to boost party voter registrati­on and turnout longterm, especially among Latinos. Though Valdez is unlikely to beat Republican Greg Abbott, a popular governor in a red state with $50 million to spend, she could benefit from a backlash against Trump, mobilizing Latino voters.

“We’re giving people hope,” Valdez said. “A lot of people have written off Texas.”

Valdez, 70, is no stranger to adversity. She grew up in San Antonio, the youngest of eight children in a Mexican-American family, migrating with her parents to work the fields. She waited tables to put herself through Southern Nazarene University, then joined the Women’s Army Corps.

She was not openly gay at the time, but had friends who were gay or were spotted at gay bars and dishonorab­ly discharged as a result. She came out later in life, in stages — living more openly in the 1990s, attending a gay-friendly church, working for the federal government and worrying less about the career implicatio­ns as she rose through the ranks, becoming a senior agent with the Department of Homeland Security in 2002.

When she retired and ran for sheriff in 2004, she was out of the closet, but even with the voter turnout boost of a presidenti­al election she was a long shot.

“She ran for sheriff in a county that did not have a single countywide official that was a Democrat and hadn’t for 20 years. She ran against an incumbent sheriff. She did not have any experience running for office. Few people, if any, gave her any chance of winning,” said Texas Democratic Party Chairman Gilberto Hinojosa.

Valdez won, 51 percent to 49 percent.

But her win helped set the stage for a larger victory, attracting Democratic candidates who swept into office in 2006. Two years later, Valdez’s margin of victory widened, 55 percent to 45 percent.

Last year, she was reelected 59 percent to 37 percent. As Dallas’ population grew and diversifie­d, one of the keys to those victories was turning out minority voters, she said.

Valdez, who announced last month that she was resigning as sheriff to run for governor, said her campaign will be focused on economic issues that concern blue-collar families and the elderly, those who worked their way up like she did, subsisting at times on peanut butter and jelly, making sure they paid the rent, cleaned up for church and prayed over their meals the way she and others did at Norma’s.

“She understand­s what those folks are going through, what they need, what their families are all about,” Hinojosa said. “The only reason Texas is not a blue state is because the huge Latino population in this state has not turned out the way it should and the way it has in states like California.”

Wendy Davis, the Democrat who ran against Abbott in 2014, lost by more than 20 percentage points, a setback for Democrats statewide. She had risen to national prominence as a state legislator filibuster­ing for abortion rights.

“One hope that Democrats have for Lupe Valdez is that she increases voter registrati­on and turnout among Latinos, and she shifts the percentage of the Latino vote won by Democrats from the 55 to 65 percent range, where it’s been recently in Texas, to the 65 to 75 percent range, where it’s been in places like California,” said Mark Jones, a political science professor at Rice University in Houston.

Democrats now have two paths to relevance in Texas, Jones said: Peel off moderate, white Republican voters or mobilize their base, especially Latinos.

Andrew White, 45, a Houston entreprene­ur and son of the late Democratic Gov. Mark White, represents the first path. Valdez represents the second.

Valdez, though openly gay, is “not defined by her sexual orientatio­n” the way Davis was defined by her stand on abortion, Jones said.

“She’s not Harvey Milk,” Jones said.

Her girlfriend, a Dallas chiropract­or, doesn’t plan to make many appearance­s on the campaign trail. Where Davis looked like a blonde model, Valdez said she looks like a “grandma.”

Valdez clashed with Abbott on immigratio­n policy as sheriff in 2015, refusing to honor federal immigratio­n holds for inmates unless they were charged with violent crimes. Municipali­ties that wanted to be “sanctuary” cities for migrants were battling federal and state officials at the time, but Valdez’s stance was more pragmatic than political, Jones said

She reasoned there was only so much space in jail, Jones said.

Abbott threatened to withhold grant funding, then announced Valdez had backed off.

Texas has since passed a law designed to crack down on sanctuary cities that would punish local officials who don’t honor federal immigratio­n detainers with jail time and fines of more than $25,000. After officials in several cities challenged the law in federal court, a judge prevented most of it from taking effect last summer, and it remains tied up in court.

Texas Republican Party Chairman James Dickey thinks Valdez’s record on sanctuary cities and other issues makes her unpalatabl­e to Texas moderates.

He said that when liberal Democrat Leticia Van de Putte ran for lieutenant governor in 2014 against conservati­ve fellow state Sen. Dan Patrick, a tea party stalwart, she lost by a wide margin: 39 percent to 58 percent.

 ?? LOUIS DELUCA/DALLAS MORNING NEWS ?? Recently resigned Dallas County Sheriff Guadalupe “Lupe” Valdez is hugged by well-wishers after announcing she will seek the Democratic nomination for Texas governor at a news conference last month in Austin, Texas.
LOUIS DELUCA/DALLAS MORNING NEWS Recently resigned Dallas County Sheriff Guadalupe “Lupe” Valdez is hugged by well-wishers after announcing she will seek the Democratic nomination for Texas governor at a news conference last month in Austin, Texas.

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