Texarkana Gazette

Uvalde mother who lost daughter runs for mayor

- ACACIA CORONADO

UVALDE, Texas — On a sticky Texas morning, Kimberly Mata-rubio is lacing up her running shoes ahead of two races she is running in Uvalde in tribute to her daughter Lexi, who was killed in the 2022 Robb Elementary School shooting.

First up is a charity run honoring Lexi’s life. Then it’s back to a tougher contest: Campaignin­g to become mayor of Uvalde, a town still divided after one of America’s deadliest mass shootings and a botched police response that is still under investigat­ion.

“One thing I hear with all of my children, and it echoes my own belief, is that right now Lexi’s legacy is our priority and we just want to honor her with action,” Mata-rubio said.

On Tuesday, Uvalde voters will pick a new mayor for the first time since the May 2022 attack that killed 19 students and two teachers. The election is a test of how the town chooses to move forward from a tragedy that some residents are ready to put in the past while others are still demanding answers.

Across the U.S. survivors of gun violence and families have run for office, with mixed results. In 2016, the father of a man killed in a Colorado movie theater shooting lost his first bid for state senate but won two years later. Democratic U.S. Rep. Lucy Mcbath, the mother of a 17-year-old slain in a Florida gas station shooting, also won a seat for Congress in 2018.

For Mata-rubio, who would become Uvalde’s first female mayor, part of the challenge in her campaign is convincing the small town of 15,000 people to choose a new direction.

A year ago, Uvalde County voters rejected Democrat Beto O’rourke in the governor’s race and a father who ran as a write-in candidate for county commission­er after his 9-yearold daughter was also killed at the school. Months later, the Texas Legislatur­e brushed off calls by Mata-rubio and other Uvalde parents to raise the minimum purchase age for some firearms — which, they say, could have prevented the tragic shooting.

This time Mata-rubio, 34, has put herself on the ballot in the open race against two other candidates, a former Uvalde mayor and a local teacher.

“Now more than ever it can’t just be a few people that are trying to look after the kids,” said Madelynn Mize, a Uvalde teacher who was still undecided on how she would vote. “We all have to do that.”

Running for mayor is the latest way Mata-rubio has channeled her grief into action over the past year and a half. The shooting upended her previous life as a soft-spoken reporter at the Uvalde Leader-news who was content with small-town living alongside her six children and husband, a local sheriff’s deputy.

After her daughter’s death, though, Mata-rubio became one of Uvalde’s most outspoken proponents for tougher gun laws, including testifying before Congress. She also decried the slow response by hundreds of law enforcemen­t officers, who waited outside Lexi’s classroom for more than an hour before confrontin­g the gunman.

Mata-rubio said those experience­s have inspired her to begin healing and change for her community from the ground up. Her campaign slogan is “Moving Forward, Together.” A cornerston­e of her platform is promising to give residents a seat at the table regardless of their background or income, she says. In the mostly Latino town, roughly 1 in 5 residents live in poverty, according to Census Bureau estimates.

On a recent weekend after the charity run —- called the Lexi Legacy 5K — Mata-rubio kept on her running shoes and started knocking on doors. When one resident spotted her on the other side of the street, she crossed the sidewalk to meet Mata-rubio.

“You’re so young,” Antonia Rios, 80, said.

Mata-rubio greeted her with a smile and stopped to chat.

Outside another house, a yard sign for Cody Smith, a former Uvalde mayor and one of Mata-rubio’s opponents, was planted in the lawn. But seeing Rubio approach, the homeowner invited her to place a sign, too.

“Her candidacy may have a little bit more movement because she knows the people in that town and she understand­s the hurt that this event caused,” said Brandon Rottinghau­s, a political science professor at the University of Houston.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States