Who founded the Raza Unida Party?

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By José Angel Gutiérrez and Luz Bazán Gutiérrez, founders of La Raza Unida Party, Exclusive for El Magonista, January 15, 2020

La Raza Unida Party (RUP) was created shortly after negotiating a settlement between boycotting Chicano students and the Crystal City Independent School District Board of Trustees in early January 1970. The famous and successful boycott had begun on December 9, 1969.

A year prior older students, many of them brothers and sisters of the successful students, failed to initiate a boycott. Together, that experience and the new student leaders, made the 1969 boycott a tremendous success. More importantly, the need to set aside the settlement and focus on removing the school board trustees and overwhelming Anglo-dominated administration, faculty and support staff, took front and center as the number one priority.

A week later at the Salon Campestre, the favorite local dance hall on the outskirts of Crystal City, many parents and happy students, about 300, met to form La Raza Unida Party (RUP) so they could compete electorally for all government positions on the school board, city, county, community college, and state legislative and executive seats. La Raza Unida Party, (RU P) was incorporated by January 17, 1970 with the State of Texas.

Elected as first county leader of the RUP for Zavala County, Texas was Luz Bazan Gutierrez, my wife then. She and I were the organizers sent by the Mexican American Youth Organization (MAYO) to establish and organize the Winter Garden Organizing Project, which we did.

Community groups were formed. In Cristal, as the Chicanos call our hometown, we organized Ciudadanos Unidos, and other similar names in Cotulla, Carrizo Springs, Pearsall, Robstown, San Juan, Harlandale and Edgewood school districts in San Antonio, and Anthony, Texas on the New Mexico/Texas border by El Paso. During the April 1970 elections for city and school boards in the three counties of La Salle (Cotulla), Dimmit (Carrizo Springs) and Zavala (Crystal City), the RUP ran 16 candidates and the RUP won 15 of these races.

The next month, two other RUP members were elected as County Commissioners in La Salle and Zavala County, Roel Rodriguez and Elena Diaz, respectively.

By September 1972, the RUP had spread and grown in 17 other states and the District of Columbia (Washington, D.C.). The RUP was elected to govern other cities such as San Juan, Poteet, Anthony, and elected many more officials including a school board member, Frank Shafer Corona in Washington D.C.

Those elected officials and other members of the RUP from across the nation met in El Paso, Texas to form the National La Raza Unida Party. The RUP continue to win elective offices across Texas and the nation. The RUP candidates filled most positions in Zavala County. Jose Serna became the first Chicano Sheriff in our county, and I became the first Chicano County Judge. There were many others who won elective office.

The RUP was removed from the Texas ballot by Democrats; denied ballot status in California and Illinois; disqualified in New Mexico and Oregon. The RUP’s candidates were defeated in other states like Arizona and Colorado. Despite the legal status being denied and the RUP label removed from ballots, the idea that people of Mexican origin should govern themselves remained.

Ex-RUP members and their children, such as Ciro Rodriguez (Harlandale) and Roberto Alonzo (Crystal City), ran and were elected to the Texas House of Representatives. Raul Grijalva of South Tucson and Ciro Rodriguez went on to higher office and became U.S. Representatives as has Joaquin Castro, son of Rosie Castro, a RUP candidate in San Antonio.

The other twin brother, Julian, just made an impressive run for the Presidency of the United States.  Today, Roberto Alonzo, from Crystal City is running for Texas Railroad Commissioner.

This is the historical legacy of the Raza Unida Party and the courageous people in Cristal, La Pryor, and Batesville of Zavala County, Texas who decided in 1970 to take the reins of political power and govern themselves.

This January 2020 is the 50th anniversary of that beginning.

Viva La Raza!

Who founded the Raza Unida Party?

By José Angel Gutiérrez and Luz Bazán Gutiérrez, founders of La Raza Unida Party, Exclusive for El Magonista, January 15, 2020

Who founded the Raza Unida Party?

José Angel Gutiérrez (second from left) and Rodolfo (“Corky”) Gonzales (center), two leaders of La Raza Unida, appear before the political party's convention in El Paso, Texas, in 1972. The party was formed in Texas in 1970 to advocate for people of Mexican descent. Ramsey Muniz was the party's candidate for Texas governor in 1972.

© Ferd Kaufman—AP/Shutterstock.com

The Chicano movement of the 1960s and ‘70s grew out of social injustices and inequities faced by Latinos in Texas.

The movement went far beyond the efforts of established organizations like the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) and the American G.I. Forum.

A group of five Chicanos — José Ángel Gutiérrez, Willie Velásquez, Mario Compean, Ignacio Pérez, and Juan Patlán — founded the Mexican American Youth Organization (MAYO) in 1967.

MAYO engaged in combative tactics and civil disobedience, which drew heavy criticism from older Mexican American political figures.

From MAYO grew the Raza Unida Party (RUP). Organizers, including Gutiérrez and Compean, founded the party in 1970. Although the party dissolved within a decade, it left a legacy of fighting for the social, political and economic advancement of Chicanos in Texas.

Three of the RUP’s founders, Mario Compean, Luz Bazán Gutiérrez, and José Angel Gutiérrez, spoke about the catalyst behind the party.

“The Raza Unida started because we were being ignored by the Democratic Party and the Republican Party,” Bazán Gutiérrez said. “They were not listening to us. We needed to have our own voice.”

The Raza Unida Party will commemorate its 50th anniversary at a conference in San Antonio this month.

Aurelio Montemayor, an educator and Chicano activist who was active in MAYO and Raza Unida Party activities, said the issues fought by the RUP five decades ago are still relevant today.

“I think the important thing is not just honoring the past, but how (it) affects teachers right now who can influence kids,” he said. “How can kids see, ‘They did this 50 years ago, what are we going to do now?’”

The Raza Unida Party holds its 50th anniversary reunion Sept. 15-17 at the University of Texas at San Antonio’s downtown campus.

The three-day conference will cover the RUP’s history and legacy, where they are now, and a look to the future.

To register for the event, click here.

“No más”

Who founded the Raza Unida Party?

José Angel Gutiérrez, co-founder of La Raza Unida and former president, grew up in Crystal City. By the start of the 1970 school year, nearly 40% of Crystal City teachers were Mexican Americans. Credit: Eddie Gaspar/The Texas Tribune

Who founded the Raza Unida Party?

Martha Cotera, co-founder of La Raza Unida, works as a librarian at the Benson Latin American Collection at the University of Texas at Austin. Credit: Eddie Gaspar/The Texas Tribune

Who founded the Raza Unida Party?

Luz Bazán Gutiérrez, co-founder of La Raza Unida, grew up in South Texas and as a teacher saw the unequal tracks on which poor Mexican American students and white students were often placed. Credit: Eddie Gaspar/The Texas Tribune

In search of democracy

Who founded the Raza Unida Party?

Rosie Castro ran for San Antonio City Council in 1971. Credit: Eddie Gaspar/The Texas Tribune

Who founded the Raza Unida Party?

Audience members listen to a panel moderated by Rosie Castro during the 50th anniversary reunion of La Raza Unida Party in San Antonio on Thursday. Credit: Eddie Gaspar/The Texas Tribune

Who founded the Raza Unida Party?

Who founded the Raza Unida Party?

First: La Raza Unida memorabilia, including a photo of Rosie Castro when she was a 23-year-old candidate for San Antonio City Council in 1971, is on display during the 50th anniversary reunion of the party in San Antonio on Thursday. Last: Rosie Castro moderates a panel during the reunion. Credit: Eddie Gaspar/The Texas Tribune

The struggle continues