Friday, May 21, 2010

BEHIND THE VENEER, LONGORIA CAN'T HIDE NAKED AMBITION

By Juan Montoya
When the voters of District 1 that includes the Southmost area voted in Ricardo Longoria in 2003, they expected a defender of their rights and an advocate of neighborhoods.
At least that's what he sold himself as when he hit the hustings squeezing his accordion and singing his personal praises to convince the voters to let him represent them.
Now nearing the end of his second term in office, the picture that emerges of Riche is not the prototype Horatio Alger one would expect from a barrio product and a Porter High School graduate.
Instead, viewers of the city cable channel will see a sniping, devious schemer who fairly screams out that he would dearly love it if the voters of the city would somehow see their way to elect him mayor of the entire city.
If this picture conveys a vain, arrogant, and self-centered individual, it should come as no surprise. After all, despite his protests, he is a politician. And as a teacher, he's probably used to being the only voice in the room to be heard. Ditto for his DJ business, where he holds a monopoly on the microphone, sharing it only with the likes of Pedro Infante, Vicente Fernandez, Patsy Cline, and other legends and musical luminaries.
Longoria was basically handed the District 1 seat during the first election using the city's single-member district scheme. Former county commissioner Lucino Rosenbaum Jr. took the then-29-year-old under his wing and supported his candidacy urging his longtime supporters to back the fledgling barrio candidate.
But when Rosenbaum tried to make a comeback against commissioner Pete Benavides, and later his widow Sofia, Longoria behind the scenes supported the Lion of Southmost's opponents.
"I really don't want to talk about that," Rosenbaum commented recently spitting out the words. "I even invited him to join the Southmost chapter of the Lions' Club that I started so people could get to know him. It's a strange kind of payback."
When Longoria did have an opponent – Catalina Presas-Garcia – he tried mightily to have her candidacy declared void by the office of the Brownsville City Secretary where one of his partners in the DJ business worked. Then, after that effort failed, he threw a tiff and threatened to pull out of the race if he didn't have his way.
He claimed she lived outside the district but she claimed she was taking care of her elderly mother and still lived in the family home. When the office of the city secretary at first rejected her signatures, and then – under scrutiny from the city administration – accepted them, he blew a fuse.
"I'll drop out of the race," he fumed. But then, like Paul on the road to Damascus, he saw the light and cooled off. By the time he got to City Hall, he'd changed his mind and said he'd run after all.
After she lost, Presas-Garcia, thank God, ran for a position as a trustee on the board of the Brownsville Independent School District and has acquitted herself as the voice of the people against the rampant corruption in that vast (and rich) bureaucracy. Her performance in the short time she has been there will far outhisne Riche's even if he holds on to the District 1 seat for a lifetime.
But I digress.
It has been said that changing her mind is a woman's prerogative.
Judging by his past performance, it is also our little Riche's.
During a public debate in the 2007 campaign against Presas-Garcia, he promised the Herald's Emma Perez Trevino in front of a college audience that he would stop taking city benefits that were not called for in the city charter.
Later, when the reporter pressed him on the matter, he reneged saying that he would continue to receive the $300 monthly stipend, the life and health insurance coverage and cell phone "on the advice of his attorneys."
By then, the 2007 election was over and he and some of his fellow commissioners continued to milk the city for the benefits until his old nemesis Robert Sanchez, gadfly Moses Sorola and Eddie de La O brough the matter to the fore by filing a citizens' lawsuit against the commissioners and the city to stop them from awarding themselves the taxpayer-funded goodies without authorization by the city charter.
(True to form, Longoria had appointed Sanchez to the PUB board, but then withdrew his suport when the PUB chairman started taking steps that threatened entrenched interests by suggesting lowering utility rates and increasing the impact fees on developers. In fact, Longoria voted against funding the study that would make rising those impact raises on developers a possibility.)
While fighting the citizen-initiated lawsuit, Longoria and his fellows had no choice but to follow the order of the state judge, but not before they ran up a $40,000 legal bill to Marc Sossi, who was later appointed as city attorney by a vote of the majority of the commissioners, including Longoria's.
Interviewed by the Herald after Mayor Pat Ahumada's hyper-publicized arrest for DWI, Longoria smugly told the newspaper that he was neither a thief nor a drinker, implying that Ahumada was both.
He conveniently forgot that the mayor had been declared innocent of theft in the $26,000 city vendor's check fiasco.
Yes, the picture that Southmost voters had of a fresh-faced teacher and young family man representing them against the faceless bureaucracy is fast wearing thin. This is now a cunning, scheming man with naked ambition who can't hide the fact that he would be our mayor.
About a month before the 2007 election, with Presas-Garcia making hay about the pothole-pocked streets and drainage problems in District 1, Longoria and his fellows on the city commission suddenly "found" $1 million in reserves to undertake an "emergency" effort to fix the streets.
His campaign literature proudly boasted of the "68 streets" in his district that had been paved during his term in office. Southmost residents and residents in the other district where another incumbent was also running for re-election woke up to suddenly find city crews and contractors busy at work fixing their streets after months of inaction.
And, of course, they also saw the incumbents, hard hats perched on their heads, personally inspecting the fine work that the crews were performing.
Has Longoria forgotten the scrubbed-faced kid who promised his constituents that he would be there for them defending them against conniving politicians who used the public treasury for their own political well-being?
"My priorities have changed; my outlook in life and my outlook on generally everything. It's part of the growing process," Longoria told the Perez-Trevino in an interview in 2007.
How true, Ricardito. How true.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

WELL
IT
SEEMS

EVERYTIME
THE INCUMBENTS
ARE RUNNING
FOR RE-ELECTION
OUR STREETS
GET PAVED,

BUT

HOW ABOUT
IN BETWEEN
WHEN THE STREETS
HAVE POTHOLES

AND FLOODED?

Anonymous said...

There is nothing wrong with someone aspiring to run for mayor, but one must have proven him or herself before the electorate. Up to now, I am not able to put my finger on a name, even as I followed the telephone book pages, that would be someone we could totally put our trust on. Why does it seem that even when a "good intentions" candidate runs for and wins the office, he becomes someone nobody recognizes anymore. A political position seems to turn people into believing that they are now over and above everyone else and that their thoughts are the only ones that don't stink. The only one that will get my vote now or when the time comes, is Mr. Camarillo, for up to now, there is no scoop on him that has tarnished his name, yet! Maybe Rene Torres? What about Sharon Putegnat for Mayor! Hey, I think I just came out with a super idea - how about it Sharon? The BHS Class of 63 could be your grassroots committee - Sharing our Sharon for Mayor!!!!

Anonymous said...

DUARDO PAZ MARTINEZ FOR MAYOR, come on now Juan Montoya, lets elect a real mayor, not a drunk or galan that spends all his time in dippy joints.
DPM, the most interesting man in town who just published a novel.
We need strong leadership in our city. Brownsville should be a jule in the desert, right now it is town just surviving.
Cantinas and Restaurants, we need class in the Mayors chair. DPM, Adelante con Paz Martinez, educated Arington school of Journalism, good man for a good position.

Anonymous said...

Mr. CAMARILLO,
HA, HA, HA, HA, HA,
PENDEJO DON'T YOU KNOW HE IS TIA CACAS PUPPET?

Anonymous said...

Sharon a gabacha, in browntown?

Anonymous said...

That is what is wrong in Brownsville!!! What is wrong with having a "gabacha" for Mayor? It is the heart of a person that matters, the scrupples and the values they represent and the guts to not let someone or something come in and corrupt them that counts. "Dale una posision de valor a un mexicano y se les sube a la cabeza." If you are a true Browntown citizen, you should know who Sharon is and what she stands for and you and I, a bunch of Mexicans, will never shake her into changing her values. Mexicanos are not the owners of Brownsville and even though the citizens are mostly brown, we need to adapt the values and inspirations of a US citizen in a US town! Arriba con Sharon! Esta gabacha no se raja!!!

rita