Judith Pappas Zaffirini | |
---|---|
Member of the Texas Senate from the 21st district | |
Assumed office January 13, 1987 | |
Preceded by | John Traeger |
Personal details | |
Born | Laredo,Texas,U.S. | February 13,1946
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse | Carlos Zaffirini Sr. |
Children | 1 |
Residence(s) | Laredo,Texas |
Alma mater | Laredo Community College University of Texas,Austin (BA) |
Judith Pappas Zaffirini (born February 13,1946) is an American politician serving as a Democratic member of the Texas State Senate from the 21st District,which includes her home city of Laredo in south Texas. Zaffririni is the first female dean of the Texas Senate. [1] Zaffirini has been named among the "Top 100 Most Influential Hispanics in the United States" by Hispanic Business magazine. [2] Zaffirini is the first Mexican American woman elected to the Texas Senate. [3]
Zaffirini is a graduate of the University of Texas at Austin. [4]
Zaffirini studied two summers at Laredo Community College (then Laredo Junior College). [5]
In 1977, Zaffirini became an associate of the Women's Institute for Freedom of the Press (WIFP). [6] WIFP is an American nonprofit publishing organization. The organization works to increase communication between women and connect the public with forms of women-based media.
In 1994, she won more than two thirds of the ballots cast in the general election against the Republican candidate, Fernando G. Cantu Jr. (1944–2016), 71,029 (68.5 percent to 32,624 (31.5 percent).
In the Democratic primary held on March 4, 2008, Zaffirini was to have faced San Antonio attorney Rene Barrientos (born January 25, 1954), but Barrientos withdrew from the race. His name, however, remained on the ballot, and he did some advertising. Zaffirini won the nomination, 108,572 votes (78.6 percent); Barrientos, 23,262 (21.4 percent). [8] [9] [10]
In the November 6, 2012, general election, Zaffirini handily defeated the Republican candidate, Grant Elliot Rostig (born c. 1958) of Lockhart in Caldwell County, a supporter of the Ron Paul presidential campaign, 2012, who was endorsed by the Republican Liberty Caucus. [11] Zaffirini received 129,894 votes (67.6 percent) to Rostig's 56,032 (29.2 percent). The remaining 3.2 percent of the vote went to the Libertarian nominee, Joseph Morse. [12] [13]
Zaffirini has a 100 percent voting record, having through 2013 cast more than fifty thousand consecutive votes since January 1987. She even once missed her son's graduation to maintain the record. [14]
On January 9, 2007, Zaffirini became the second in seniority in the 31-member Texas Senate, of which she has been a member since 1987. [15]
In 2011, Zaffirini voted against the state appropriations bill because it reduced funding for public education by $5.4 billion, including $1.4 billion for targeted programs, such as pre-kindergarten expansion grants, one of her favorite programs. In 2013, Zaffirini will push for the issuance of tuition revenue bonds to fund capital construction projects on state college and university campuses, including TAMIU in Laredo. [16]
In 2012, Lieutenant Governor Dewhurst removed Zaffirini from the chairmanship of the Senate Committee on Higher Education in favor of Kel Seliger, a Republican from Amarillo. Instead Zaffirini chairs the Senate Committee on Government Organization. She will remain a member of the higher education committee under Seliger and will continue as the co-chair of the Oversight Committee on Higher Education Governance Excellence and Transparency. Zaffirini said that she will continue to influence higher education policy "but the only difference is that the gavel won't be in my hand." [17]
In July 2013, Zaffirini joined her Democratic colleagues in voting against Republican-sponsored legislation which passed the Senate, 19 to 11, to reduce from twenty-six to twenty weeks of gestation the maximum time limit during which a woman can procure an abortion. Zaffirini, who is anti-abortion, describes the new law as not anti-abortion, per se, but one that limits a woman's access to health care and fails to address the question of unintended pregnancies. [18] Zaffirini said that she does "not believe that an unborn child can feel pain at twenty weeks. Nevertheless that had nothing to do with my position. ..." [18] Zaffirini said, "Like it or not abortion is the law of the land, and because it is we must insure that women have access to safe and legal abortions. If they do not, then they will resort to coat hangers and self-aborting and illegal abortions, and that is wrong." [18] Opponents of the law, such as Senator Royce West of Dallas, vowed a court challenge. [19]
On March 8, 2017, Zaffirini was the only dissenter in an eight-to-one vote of the Senate State Affairs Committee of the bathroom bill, Senate Bill 6, introduced by her Republican colleague, Lois Kolkhorst of Brenham and strongly pushed by Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick, the Republican presiding officer of the Senate. The bill would require persons to use public restrooms corresponding to their genitalia at birth. Strongly opposed by business and athletic interests, the measure is now pending before the Texas House of Representatives. [20] Opponents of the measure have put their hopes in Moderate Republican Joe Straus of San Antonio, the House Speaker, who is known to be lukewarm or even hostile toward the measure. [21]
In the 2017 legislative session, Zaffirini claimed her greatest numerical success record yet. Of the 168 bills that she introduced, 108 (64 percent) passed. Lawmakers introduced 6,631 bills but sent fewer, 1,211 (18 percent), to the governor than they have done since 1997 in the third year of the administration of Governor George W. Bush. [22]
Zaffririni became the first female dean of the Texas Senate on December 30, 2023 when Sen. John Whitmire resigned. [1]
In July 2013, Zaffirini was twice sued in Bexar County for alleged "gross mismanagement" of an estate valued at $150 million. The sisters, Josefina Alexander Gonzalez (1914–2014) and Delfina E. Alexander (died 2008), together owned about one thousand acres in South Texas. Between 1995 and 2002, five companies were organized to develop the property, but some of the businesses have long been inactive. The sisters further formed the Delfina and Josephina Alexander Family Trust designed to pass the proceeds of the holdings to Gonzalez's daughter, Rocio G. Guerra, and Gonzalez's two grandchildren. The second suit alleges that Zaffirini and two co-defendants, David H. Arredondo and Clarissa N. Chapa, committed tax fraud, forged documents, and paid themselves excessive fees in the amount of $420,000 for management of the Alexander holdings. The defendants are also accused of withholding money from the trust. Zaffirini's attorney-husband, Carlos Zaffirini Sr., said that Guerra and her children, have tried to break the trust on four occasions and that the basic issue centers on squabbling among the heirs over the collection of the money. [23] Josefina Alexander Gonzales died in December 2014, five days before her 100th birthday. [24] [25]
In August 2016, the longstanding case was resolved without going to trial. Zaffirini delivered $35 million in cash and land to three Alexander family trusts that benefit Rocio Guerra, Zaffirini's second cousin, and Guerra's two children. The three are the sole heirs to the Alexander estate. In return, Zaffirini will take control of nearly 450 acres of undeveloped real estate off Del Mar Boulevard. Zaffirini will continue to serve as an executor and trustee of certain entities of the Alexander estate. [26]
On the occasion of Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump's visit to Laredo on July 23, 2015, Zaffrini wrote the lead column on the editorial page the next day in the Laredo Morning Times to question Trump's commitment to border issues. [27]
Election history of Zaffirini since 1992. [28]
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Judith Zaffirini (Incumbent) | 129,608 | 68.24 | |
Republican | Louis H. Bruni | 55,363 | 29.15 | |
Libertarian | Barry L. Allison | 4,966 | 2.61 | |
Total votes | 189,937 | 100.00 |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Judith Zaffirini (Incumbent) | 108,572 | 78.6 | |
Democratic | Rene Barrientos | 23,262 | 21.4 | |
Total votes | 131,834 | 100.0 |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Judith Zaffirini (Incumbent) | 127,573 | 100.00 | ||
Total votes | 127,573 | 100.00 | |||
Democratic hold |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Judith Zaffirini (Incumbent) | 62,960 | 78.65 | |
Democratic | Raymond Bruni | 17,089 | 21.35 | |
Total votes | 80,049 | 100.00 |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Judith Zaffirini (Incumbent) | 95,644 | 89.11 | ||
Libertarian | Jeff Carruthers | 11,688 | 10.89 | ||
Total votes | 107,332 | 100.00 | |||
Democratic hold |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Judith Zaffirini (Incumbent) | 106,089 | 66.46 | ||
Republican | David Swift | 53,547 | 33.54 | ||
Total votes | 159,636 | 100.00 | |||
Democratic hold |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Judith Zaffirini (Incumbent) | 91,956 | 66.32 | ||
Republican | James C. Whitworth | 46,698 | 33.68 | ||
Total votes | 138,654 | 100.00 | |||
Democratic hold |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Judith Zaffirini (Incumbent) | 71,029 | 68.53 | ||
Republican | Fernando Cantu Jr. | 32,624 | 31.47 | ||
Total votes | 103,653 | 100.00 | |||
Democratic hold |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Judith Zaffirini (Incumbent) | 111,398 | 100.00 | ||
Total votes | 111,398 | 100.00 | |||
Democratic hold |
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