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“I’ve lived in Toledo or the Toledo area my entire life and I’m
concerned. It comes down to just that,” said Ms. Rios on a
recent Saturday morning, while sipping coffee in her downtown
campaign office.
“I feel we are facing so many grave and serious issues and I was
seeing so much bickering, so much politics-as-usual. The whole
process was not changing and we need to change. I think we are
at a place where we either become great innovators or we are
looking at the great place where we once were. I don’t want to
see that happen and I don’t think it’s necessary.”
Ms. Rios had gathered there with her campaign manager, her son,
and a volunteer, preparing to go door-to-door in the Old West
End where she has called home with her husband of 30 years.
Ms. Rios, 57, has prior political experience. Currently co-chair
of the Ohio Green Party, she has run twice before unsuccessfully
for lieutenant governor.
“We knew we would not win,” she explained. “We needed to do
those runs in order to maintain party status. We had to test
those waters.”
There is currently a court battle raging to challenge the legal
status of alternative political parties, such as the Green and
Libertarian parties, on the Ohio ballot in 2012. Her perception
that the existing two-party system has failed is the reason Ms.
Rios now is running for city council, a race she described as “a
completely different kettle of fish” from her prior candidacies.
“One, I have a genuine and deep attachment and commitment to
this community,” she said. “Two, I feel I have been an
entrepreneur of sorts: a political entrepreneur, a social
justice entrepreneur. I have a set of tools and skills to ask
those questions and then find those answers.”
Ms. Rios cited the recent sale of the Marina District property
to Chinese investors as a recent example. She blamed city
leaders for a “lack of vision” for the lucrative riverfront
property. The president of Toledo NOW criticized a plan to put
condos, hotels, and retail at the site, which depend on people’s
ability to spend money. She questioned why the focus is not on
creating employment instead.
“We’ve been doing the same things over and over in different
configurations,” she said. “Those are not things that create a
strong economic infrastructure. Those are things that rely on a
strong economic infrastructure. So how do we create that strong
economic infrastructure? I think we’re in new territory. I think
we have to admit we don’t know what’s going to work.”
Ms. Rios stated the belief that Toledo has “turned the corner”
as a manufacturing community.
“We are a world community now,” she said. “Either we use that to
our advantage or we suffer economic hardship as a community.”
Ms. Rios is a patient advocate at the Center for Choice.
She is the lone Latina on the Nov. 8 ballot. Lourdes Santiago
had filed to run for a judge’s seat, but only as a backup to
another Democratic candidate who was facing removal from the
ballot. Since he won a legal fight to save his candidacy, Ms.
Santiago withdrew her name from consideration.
The Green Party candidate believes her Mexican roots would serve
her well in office. Ms. Rios is the daughter of migrant farm
workers and comes from a large family of seven daughters and a
son. She grew up in “a three-room shack with no plumbing or
electricity” before her family finally settled on a five-acre
parcel of farmland in the mostly-black Spencer-Sharples
neighborhood. Ms. Rios sees her parents, now in their 80’s, at
least once each week.
“It’s the foundation of what I do and how I approach things:
family and community are very important to us,” she said. “While
I do consider myself a somewhat atypical Latina—I’m a fiercely
feminist Latina—not only do I think my presence as a Latino in
this race is important, but the Latino perspective is going to
be huge, especially going into the 2012 presidential race.”
Ms. Rios readily admits she was a high school dropout who did
not get her diploma until the age of 23. She graduated from the
University of Toledo well into her 30’s, with a degree in
Spanish.
“I know this community like the back of my hand,” she said.
“I’ve stood on welfare lines. I’ve stood in unemployment lines.
I had both of my sons with no healthcare coverage. I know what
this community is like.”
Education, immigration, and healthcare coverage are important
issues to Ms. Rios, who described herself as a “disenfranchised
Latina” in her youth. If elected, she stated that it will be
important to invite everyone to the table to participate in
finding ways to move the city forward.
“I will never tell you I have all the answers. I will rely
heavily on the people in the district for answers and
solutions,” she said. “In order for me to succeed, they will
have to work harder than they have ever worked with a
politician, because I will rely on them. I will need them.”
Her other major objective is to show that there are alternatives
to the current two-party system, which she called “a failure.”
Ms. Rios wants young people, including her sons Gabriel, 30, and
Alexander, 25, to share in the economic opportunities available
to past generations.
“’We the people’—perhaps the most powerful words ever uttered,”
she said. “If we’re ever going to put an answer to this mess
that we’re in, that would be the answer: that we the people, we
step up, we participate in democracy. We need to start fueling
and generating those solutions that we’re going to need to get
past these economic difficulties.”
As an example, Ms. Rios would like to take $2,000 of her
potential city council salary to create “civics internships” for
young people, so they can learn firsthand from elected officials
how government really works. She hopes her contribution would be
seed money and that other city council members would contribute
part of their salary toward the cause “if they are able.”
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