Newsflash:
Inoculating Our Children Against Fear and Hatred "Ewww. Don't do it, Patrick. Don't do it. Dogs pee here." A woman was giving my husband a hard time because our 10-month-old son had dropped his banana on the ground. Patrick picked it up, licked it and was about to hand it back to our boy. Seamus grabbed for it eagerly and scarfed it down. A minute or two later, he was grunting for more. Read the Full Story
Pentagon officials ask Congress to shift $9.6B The Pentagon wants Congress to shift $9.6 billion of this year’s Defense Department budget toward expenses for the Afghanistan war, transportation and other items. Read the Full Story
Syria: the threats, costs, claims and lives What the civil war in Syria has exposed is that the massive political and social transformation, and real regime change under way is led by people themselves. US military involvement serves only to escalate the destruction. Read the Full Story
Pentagon Said to Seek $80 Billion for War Amid Withdrawal The Pentagon will ask Congress to approve about $79.5 billion for combat operations, the least since 2005, as U.S. troops withdraw from Afghanistan, according to administration officials. Read the Full Story
Jerry Brown: California’s Mystery Man One of California’s great mysteries is the state’s governor, Jerry Brown. In a time when America’s politicians strive to be everywoman and everyman, Brown goes his own way. While a nation frantically chases youth, the 75-year-old governor who glories in his age and experience, is at the top of his game. Read the Full Story
No Koch News: A Movement to Unsubscribe After years of mismanagement, the Tribune Company newspapers -- including the Chicago Tribune and L.A. Times -- are up for sale.  And one of the potential buyers? The Koch brothers.  And wow are people outraged! Read the Full Story
Video: Pentagon Accused of 'Rewriting Constitution' to Wage Endless War in Senate Hearing Pentagon officials today claimed President Obama and future presidents have the power to send troops anywhere in the world to fight groups linked to al-Qaeda, based in part on the Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF), passed by Congress days after the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. Read the Full Story
An urgent message to 200 members of Congress They fanned out across the country from Los Angeles to Phoenix, Chicago, south to Atlanta and Miami, to the towns of Western Massachusetts, in New York City and beyond, and they entered offices on Capitol Hill in a national “Educate Congress” letter-drop campaign. Read the Full Story
When the IRS targeted liberals Under George W. Bush, it went after the NAACP, Greenpeace and even a liberal church.                          Read the Full Story
Logo Lowdown from the 2012 elections. Part 1--donors on the record Here's who is buying America's democracy The spark that ignited tea party wrath in 2008 was not such right-wing bugaboos as "Obamacare," the federal deficit, or states' rights, which were added on later by Koch-created front groups. Read the Full Story
Logo Lowdown from the 2012 elections. Part 2--donors OFF the record, or off the radar The money swamp created by Citizens United: Dark Money, corporate shell games, and SuperPAC plutocrats Some of you might remember "CREEP" from 1972's Nixon-McGovern matchup. It could've been an apt code name for Tricky Dick himself, but instead it referred to the "Committee to RE-Elect the President." Read the Full Story
H.R. 1000, the “Humphrey-Hawkins Full Employment and Training Act” Since 2000 more than 50,000 manufacturing facilities in the U.S. have closed and roughly 50,000 industrial jobs have been lost each month.  Now service sector jobs, where the remaining two-thirds of all workers are currently employed, are disappearing.   Read the Full Story
image Inoculating Our Children Against Fear and Hatred
image Pentagon officials ask Congress to shift $9.6B
image Syria: the threats, costs, claims and lives
image Pentagon Said to Seek $80 Billion for War Amid Withdrawal
image Jerry Brown: California’s Mystery Man
image No Koch News: A Movement to Unsubscribe
image Video: Pentagon Accused of 'Rewriting Constitution' to Wage Endless War in Senate Hearing
image An urgent message to 200 members of Congress
image When the IRS targeted liberals
image Logo Lowdown from the 2012 elections. Part 1--donors on the record
image Logo Lowdown from the 2012 elections. Part 2--donors OFF the record, or off the radar
image H.R. 1000, the “Humphrey-Hawkins Full Employment and Training Act”
Friday, 16 December 2011 00:00

On the Cusp of History

Written by  Mari Herreras | Tucson Weekly

Sitting at the table in her in-laws' dining room in Tucson, Wenona Benally Baldenegro begins like she would any campaign interview, discussing where she grew up and the road that led her to public service.

However, this isn't a typical campaign story—partly because if she wins the race for Arizona's new Congressional District 1, this Democrat and member of the Navajo Nation would make history as the first Native American woman to serve in Congress.

The district is currently represented by Republican Paul Gosar. Like the other districts across the state, it is going through changes that will make this campaign worth watching for Southern Arizonans. The district stretches far north into the Navajo and Hopi nations and the Flagstaff area, but proposed redistricting maps show it spreading farther south, to include Oro Valley and Marana.

Sitting across from Benally Baldenegro, 34, is Carolina Cruz, whom she warmly calls tia, or aunt. Cruz is the aunt of Benally Baldenegro's husband, Salomón Baldenegro Jr.

Cruz and Baldenegro's mother, Cecilia Cruz, grew up in the mining communities of Hayden and Winkelman, where their father, the late Roberto Cruz, helped start Local 886 of the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers, which grew into the United Steelworkers Union Local 886.

Going to these towns with her aunt and other family members for the campaign forced her aunt to reconnect with the family's history in mining and unionizing—and to remember how part of the Chicano movement was born on picket lines.

The sisters grew up watching their mother and father struggle to provide for their family while fighting for better wages.

"It has brought up a lot of emotions that people have put away for 50 years or 60-some years. But going back, the people are so strong, so resilient," Cruz says, tears rolling down her cheeks as she describes her family's history. "When the first union came in, my uncles had come (home from World War II), and they came back to a segregated town."

As her uncles made their way home to Arizona, they saw racism's ugly visage.

"So all of that is our history, and that's why they could no longer (accept half the pay) for the same amount of work," Cruz says.

When the Cruz sisters were little girls, Mexican-American kids could only use the town swimming pool one day a week.

"This campaign has brought back memories," Cruz says. "Yes, some of those memories are hard, but it's been good to be reminded of our history, and Native American history, too."

In these mining towns, residents have told them how refreshing it is to have politicians actually knock on their doors. "That hasn't happened in a long time," Cruz says.

They've also gone into the Navajo and Hopi reservations, bringing members of both sides of the family—Mexican American and Native American—in a concerted effort to get Benally Baldenegro elected.

Benally Baldenegro married Baldenegro Jr. this year. The couple met while volunteering for Randy Parraz's unsuccessful 2010 U.S. Senate campaign. Baldenegro Jr.'s father is a well-known local activist who is credited with helping start Tucson's Chicano-rights movement in the late 1960s and early 1970s. His mother's family has strong union roots. (See "Being Baldenegro," March 31.)

Benally Baldenegro grew up in Kayenta, a small town in the Navajo Nation. Her father is an engineer who moved the family there when he got a job at the Peabody Coal mine near Black Mesa. Her parents divorced, and Benally Baldenegro's mother had to return to college to become a teacher to help support her and her three brothers.

"When my parents divorced, she realized, 'I only have a high school diploma. I'm only able to teach as a substitute. I need more than this,'" Benally Baldenegro recalls.

While Benally Baldenegro was in high school, her mother went to college, and she helped take care of her younger brothers. After the divorce, they went from being fairly well-off to being fairly poor.

Benally Baldenegro says education was always important to her. She graduated second in her high school class, and turned down Yale when Arizona State University offered her a full scholarship.

"Coming from a single-parent household, I couldn't turn that down," she says.

After ASU, moved by injustices to the Navajo people, Benally Baldenegro decided to go to law school and was accepted to Harvard. She also received her master's degree in public policy from Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government.

During her studies, Benally Baldenegro did an internship in Canada, working with a native group on health-care issues. She spent another summer in Australia, working for a group doing research on aborigines.

"That's when I decided I wanted to combine my degrees with public policy. So I stayed at Harvard and got a master's in public policy—and that expanded my world even more. My classmates came from all over the world. It was just this fantastic learning environment," Benally Baldenegro says.

After working for a law firm in Portland, Ore., Benally Baldenegro decided to return to Arizona. She was interested in teaching law, so she enrolled in the master's of law program at the UA law school.

"I was on track to become a law professor," she says.

But in January, Benally Baldenegro decided to run for office.

"One thing I have discovered is when I talk about my story, it's not just my personal story. My family and community story is very similar to many stories, not only across the district, but across Arizona, across the Southwest, across America," she says.

That's why her connection to the Baldenegro-Cruz families is important to her.

"It's two different cultures ... but it's all the same story. Really, it's who we are as Americans and as Arizonans—not only our two families and how they came to be, but how our two communities came to be. We are all Arizonans."

Last week, U.S. Rep. Raúl Grijalva formally endorsed her. She earlier received endorsements from the United Steelworkers of America and the Progressive Democrats of America, which should give her a boost with fundraising in a tough primary against former Congresswoman Ann Kirkpatrick.

"We share stories of success and courage and strength," Benally Baldenegro says. "I think that's really what people love about my campaign. It's not only about who I am and what I want to do, but bringing us together."

Sitting at the table in her in-laws' dining room in Tucson, Wenona Benally Baldenegro begins like she would any campaign interview, discussing where she grew up and the road that led her to public service.

However, this isn't a typical campaign story—partly because if she wins the race for Arizona's new Congressional District 1, this Democrat and member of the Navajo Nation would make history as the first Native American woman to serve in Congress.

The district is currently represented by Republican Paul Gosar. Like the other districts across the state, it is going through changes that will make this campaign worth watching for Southern Arizonans. The district stretches far north into the Navajo and Hopi nations and the Flagstaff area, but proposed redistricting maps show it spreading farther south, to include Oro Valley and Marana.

Sitting across from Benally Baldenegro, 34, is Carolina Cruz, whom she warmly calls tia, or aunt. Cruz is the aunt of Benally Baldenegro's husband, Salomón Baldenegro Jr.

Cruz and Baldenegro's mother, Cecilia Cruz, grew up in the mining communities of Hayden and Winkelman, where their father, the late Roberto Cruz, helped start Local 886 of the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers, which grew into the United Steelworkers Union Local 886.

Going to these towns with her aunt and other family members for the campaign forced her aunt to reconnect with the family's history in mining and unionizing—and to remember how part of the Chicano movement was born on picket lines.

The sisters grew up watching their mother and father struggle to provide for their family while fighting for better wages.

"It has brought up a lot of emotions that people have put away for 50 years or 60-some years. But going back, the people are so strong, so resilient," Cruz says, tears rolling down her cheeks as she describes her family's history. "When the first union came in, my uncles had come (home from World War II), and they came back to a segregated town."

As her uncles made their way home to Arizona, they saw racism's ugly visage.

"So all of that is our history, and that's why they could no longer (accept half the pay) for the same amount of work," Cruz says.

When the Cruz sisters were little girls, Mexican-American kids could only use the town swimming pool one day a week.

"This campaign has brought back memories," Cruz says. "Yes, some of those memories are hard, but it's been good to be reminded of our history, and Native American history, too."

In these mining towns, residents have told them how refreshing it is to have politicians actually knock on their doors. "That hasn't happened in a long time," Cruz says.

They've also gone into the Navajo and Hopi reservations, bringing members of both sides of the family—Mexican American and Native American—in a concerted effort to get Benally Baldenegro elected.

Benally Baldenegro married Baldenegro Jr. this year. The couple met while volunteering for Randy Parraz's unsuccessful 2010 U.S. Senate campaign. Baldenegro Jr.'s father is a well-known local activist who is credited with helping start Tucson's Chicano-rights movement in the late 1960s and early 1970s. His mother's family has strong union roots. (See "Being Baldenegro," March 31.)

Benally Baldenegro grew up in Kayenta, a small town in the Navajo Nation. Her father is an engineer who moved the family there when he got a job at the Peabody Coal mine near Black Mesa. Her parents divorced, and Benally Baldenegro's mother had to return to college to become a teacher to help support her and her three brothers.

"When my parents divorced, she realized, 'I only have a high school diploma. I'm only able to teach as a substitute. I need more than this,'" Benally Baldenegro recalls.

While Benally Baldenegro was in high school, her mother went to college, and she helped take care of her younger brothers. After the divorce, they went from being fairly well-off to being fairly poor.

Benally Baldenegro says education was always important to her. She graduated second in her high school class, and turned down Yale when Arizona State University offered her a full scholarship.

"Coming from a single-parent household, I couldn't turn that down," she says.

After ASU, moved by injustices to the Navajo people, Benally Baldenegro decided to go to law school and was accepted to Harvard. She also received her master's degree in public policy from Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government.

During her studies, Benally Baldenegro did an internship in Canada, working with a native group on health-care issues. She spent another summer in Australia, working for a group doing research on aborigines.

"That's when I decided I wanted to combine my degrees with public policy. So I stayed at Harvard and got a master's in public policy—and that expanded my world even more. My classmates came from all over the world. It was just this fantastic learning environment," Benally Baldenegro says.

After working for a law firm in Portland, Ore., Benally Baldenegro decided to return to Arizona. She was interested in teaching law, so she enrolled in the master's of law program at the UA law school.

"I was on track to become a law professor," she says.

But in January, Benally Baldenegro decided to run for office.

"One thing I have discovered is when I talk about my story, it's not just my personal story. My family and community story is very similar to many stories, not only across the district, but across Arizona, across the Southwest, across America," she says.

That's why her connection to the Baldenegro-Cruz families is important to her.

"It's two different cultures ... but it's all the same story. Really, it's who we are as Americans and as Arizonans—not only our two families and how they came to be, but how our two communities came to be. We are all Arizonans."

Last week, U.S. Rep. Raúl Grijalva formally endorsed her. She earlier received endorsements from the United Steelworkers of America and the Progressive Democrats of America, which should give her a boost with fundraising in a tough primary against former Congresswoman Ann Kirkpatrick.

"We share stories of success and courage and strength," Benally Baldenegro says. "I think that's really what people love about my campaign. It's not only about who I am and what I want to do, but bringing us together."

Link to original article from Tucson Weekly

Read 3332 times Last modified on Saturday, 21 January 2012 20:52

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