The Taos News

Public service has long been her calling

- By MICHAEL GERSTEIN

Teresa Leger Fernandez always knew she wanted to be in public service.

Born and raised in New Mexico, the daughter of a school superinten­dent and a teacher, the chance to attend Yale and later Stanford University was the opportunit­y of a lifetime for a young woman from Las Vegas, New Mexico. But Leger Fernandez said it was the work that needed to be accomplish­ed back home – not the degrees on the coast – that always drove her

Public service, she said, was never a question.

“I think I always [knew], because I was my parents’ daughter,” said Leger Fernandez, whose father, Ray Leger, served in the Legislatur­e. Her mother, Manuelita de Atocha Lucero, was a teacher.

“They really dedicated themselves to public service,” she said. “My grandmothe­r was also an educator. I have some fancy

degrees. Let’s be honest, I could have gone and done different things, but that was not me. It was just natural.”

Leger Fernandez’s next step on the rungs of public service – in this case, politics – may be taken next month. She is heavily favored to win New Mexico’s 3rd Congressio­nal District in a race against Republican Alexis Martinez Johnson.

Leger Fernandez’s toughest battle may have been in June, when she defeated well-known and better-funded Valerie Plame and five other Democratic oppo

nents in a tough primary. Along the way, she earned a slew of endorsemen­ts from a variety of environmen­tal groups, pueblos and tribes in New Mexico, plus unions and political action committees.

If she is elected to the seat being vacated by U.S. Rep. Ben Ray Luján, and if U.S. Rep. Xochitl Torres Small and U.S. Rep. Deb Haaland, both Democrats, win elections in their respective districts, New Mexico would be the first state in the nation to have all its House seats filled by women of color, state Democratic Party Chairwoman Marg Elliston said.

It’s a possibilit­y of no small import to Leger Fernandez, a longtime attorney and mother of three who lives in Santa Fe.

“I think that women of the different communitie­s of color in the United States need to be in all the places where decisions are made impacting their communitie­s,” she said. “It’s a lived experience, so you have that muscle memory of ‘this is an issue we need to talk about.’ “

For her, those issues are many – ranging from renewable energy to health care to narrowing the gap between rich and poor with a more progressiv­e income tax structure. Her ability to talk about policy – federal, state, local, tribal – can fill a reporter’s notebook. But to her friends, that’s not surprising.

“She’s one of the smartest people I know,” said Vangie Samora, a friend of Leger Fernandez since the 1970s, when they first met performing together at a bilingual theater company in Albuquerqu­e. “She’s really brilliant, and she’s loyal. She’s going to be one of the idea people in Congress.”

Leger Fernandez’s Republican oppo

nent, Martinez Johnson, also is Hispanic. But the 3rd District, which encompasse­s most of the northern third of the state, has leaned heavily Democrat, electing only one GOP candidate since its inception nearly 40 years ago. It is not considered a competitiv­e district for Republican­s, and Leger Fernandez’s fundraisin­g efforts reflect that the bulk of her battle was already fought and won in the primary.

During the primary, she stressed her deep local roots and granular knowledge of the issues facing Northern New Mexico – from its culture to the need for preserving freshwater in an arid region where the resource will grow more scarce as the impact of climate change continues to take its toll.

Leger Fernandez said the COVID-19 pandemic has underscore­d the critical importance of the infrastruc­ture gap between a city like Santa Fe and places like the Navajo Nation in Western New Mexico. A lack of running water and internet service made adapting to the pandemic that much harder for Native American communitie­s whose children needed internet access to log into classes that shifted online and who needed water to wash their hands.

She said she intimately understand­s those problems and others, including the poverty, substance abuse and diabetes issues that helped COVID-19 tear through Indian Country in the spring and summer. And she feels her knowledge of how government can ease such hurdles – after her time as a White House Fellow under former President Bill Clinton and as a special assistant to the Cabinet secretary at the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t – will come in handy in Congress.

Terry Brunner, who headed the Depart

ment of Agricultur­e’s rural developmen­t agency in New Mexico from 2009 to 2016, said he recalls when Laguna Pueblo had no internet access as recently as 10 years ago. Leger Fernandez helped the pueblo jump through the legal hoops to get broadband access, he said.

She did the same thing at Santo Domingo Pueblo, Brunner said.

“She’s a passionate advocate for the projects she believes in, but what she also lends to these projects is just a really firm understand­ing of the rules and the regulation­s and what’s needed to be done,” he said.

Leger Fernandez’s longtime law firm partner, Wayne Bladh, worked with her for nearly 30 years. He said Leger Fernandez’s “deep and profound understand­ing” of the area and her ability to establish personal relationsh­ips – even with those who may disagree with her – make a difference when it comes time to get things accomplish­ed.

Leger Fernandez, he said, is able to use that gift “that would then allow her to start talking about an issue in a way that person would have some sympathy with.”

But after decades in Santa Fe, Leger Fernandez hopes her next chapter will be in Washington, D.C.

“I am radically optimistic,” she said. “I think that it is very important to lay out what you want and to do everything you can to try to get there. What this COVID crisis has done is highlight to us that our system is broken. So given that we have to build it back, that we need to build it back with an understand­ing that we shouldn’t just patch together a broken system, but rather we should strengthen it and build it back in a way that meets the needs ... of the American people.”

Secretary of Housing and Urban Developmen­t.

HAVE YOU EVER BEEN CHARGED OR CONVICTED OF A CRIME, INCLUDING DRUNKEN DRIVING?

HAVE YOU EVER FILED FOR BANKRUPTCY OR BEEN INVOLVED IN A BANKRUPTCY PROCEEDING, EITHER PERSONALLY OR IN BUSINESS?

HAVE YOU EVER BEEN THE SUBJECT OF LIENS FOR UNPAID TAXES?

No.

No.

No.

POLICY QUESTIONS:

As a Latina candidate for Congress, how would you use your platform and policies to uplift underrepre­sented communitie­s in New Mexico?

This district deserves to be represente­d by someone who knows its beauty, but also its poverty and opportunit­ies. I will take the lived experience from our economical­ly struggling, but culturally rich rural, Latino and Native American communitie­s to Congress. If we are not in the room, our issues aren’t raised.

What’s the most important issue in politics or policy right now you’d like to fix in Congress and how would you go about solving that problem?

We must pass a bold and historic economic recovery bill that also addresses our existing inequities and multiple crises of health care, racial injustice and climate change. We must fund a broad definition of infrastruc­ture that includes health facilities, clean energy, housing, schools and a WPA for our creative sector.

What would you say to voters who might be on the fence about whether to vote for you or your opponent?

For 30 years, I’ve worked on the issues that matter to New Mexicans: building rural health centers, businesses, broadband and infrastruc­ture; fighting for voting rights; and protecting our environmen­t. Vote for me if you want someone with the experience, commitment and heart to lead on these issues in Congress.

What did you learn from fighting in a competitiv­e primary you’ll take with you into the final weeks of the general election campaign?

In the primary, we inspired record turnout with a message of protecting the things we love – our democracy, our health care, our future and this beautiful place we call home. The same message of rejecting a politics of fear and instead embracing a politics of opportunit­y will win in November.

 ?? COURTESY PHOTO ?? Teresa Leger Fernandez is Democratic candidate for New Mexico Congressio­nal District 3.
COURTESY PHOTO Teresa Leger Fernandez is Democratic candidate for New Mexico Congressio­nal District 3.
 ?? NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO ?? Teresa Leger Fernandez speaks at the 2020 Democratic pre-primary convention. Leger Fernandez has been questioned over ‘dark money’ spending on her behalf.
NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO Teresa Leger Fernandez speaks at the 2020 Democratic pre-primary convention. Leger Fernandez has been questioned over ‘dark money’ spending on her behalf.

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