Sneha Girap (Editor)

Mercurio Martinez

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Preceded by
  
Andres "Andy" Ramos

Political party
  
Democratic Party

Name
  
Mercurio Martinez

Nationality
  
Mexican American

Succeeded by
  
Louis H. Bruni


Mercurio Martinez Mercurio Martinez Jr 71701600 VOCES Oral History Project


Constituency
  
Laredo, Rio Bravo, El Cenizo, Auilares, Botines, Bruni, Callaghan, Darwin, Islitas, La Presa, Laredo Ranchettes, Larga Vista, Las Tiendas, Los Ojuelos, Mirando City, Oilton, Pescadito, Ranchitos Las Lomas, Santo Tomas, and Webb

Born
  
July 25, 1937 (age 86) Laredo, Webb County, Texas (
1937-07-25
)

Spouse(s)
  
Rosa Ancira Martinez (married 1959)

Children
  
Six children: Leticia, Adriana, Mercurio, III, Jorge, Carlos, and Rosalycia

Education
  
University of North Texas, Laredo Community College, St. Mary's University, Texas

Mercurio J. Martinez, Jr., often known as Merc Martinez (born July 25, 1937), is an educator, rancher, and businessman from his native Laredo, Texas. From 1991 to 2002, he was the County Judge of Webb County in South Texas.

Contents

Background

Martinez was one of two children born at the age of sixty-three to Mercurio Martinez, Sr. (1876-1965), and his third wife, the 42-year-old former Cristina Treviño. The senior Martinez was a descendant of Spanish-Mexican pioneers who had settled on the banks of the Rio Grande River in the mid-eighteenth century. An educator and public official in his native Zapata County, Martinez subsequently practiced law in Laredo until 1942, when he retired at the age of sixty-six. He continued to associate with other lawyers on occasional cases dealing with land ownership and engaged in historical research. The younger sister of Martinez, Jr., is named Rosa, which is also the name of his wife, the former Rosa Ancira, whom he married in 1959. Mercurio and Rosa Martinez have six children, Leticia, Adriana, Mercurio, III, Jorge, Carlos, and Rosalycia.

Martinez, Jr., was reared in the downtown La Azteca neighborhood of Laredo and graduated from St. Augustine High School, then located downtown in the San Agustin de Laredo Historic District adjacent to the Cathedral of San Agustin. He studied at Laredo Junior College, renamed in 1993 as Laredo Community College. He was exempt from conscription in the 1960s because he was a married father. From 1968 to 1978, Martinez was trustee of LJC and its parent organization, the Laredo Independent School District. This was an era where the "Patron Party" ruled all local governmental entities providing political favors in return for loyalty and votes. He has served since 2004 on the elected LCC board. He received his Bachelor of Business Administration in 1959 from St. Mary's University in San Antonio. He procured a Master of Business Administration degree from the University of North Texas in Denton. He did post-graduate study at Southern Methodist University near Dallas, Colorado State University in Fort Collins, and the Harvard University School of Business.

Martinez was an LJC business and economics instructor from c. 1960 until 1967, when he joined Union National Bank of Laredo, since Wells Fargo near City Hall.

Political life

In 1978, Martinez was elected to the Laredo City Council, a nominally nonpartisan position. At the same time, Aldo Tatangelo was elected mayor to succeed the retiring J. C. "Pepe" Martin of the former "Independent Club" or "Patron Party", who subsequently spent time in the Webb County Jail for theft of municipal services. Martinez worked on the council to change the city government from "strong mayor" to "weak mayor" format through a new municipal charter. After a brief time on the council, he was asked by U.S. President Jimmy Carter, a fellow Democrat, to head the Southwest Regional Office in Dallas of the Small Business Administration. During this stint, he lived in Dallas on weekdays but returned to Laredo most weekends.

In 1982, Martinez returned to Laredo to run for mayor against Tatangelo, and though he had led in the primary, he lost in the runoff election. Martinez was "considered the best Old Party (Patron) candidate to reclaim the mayorship" in Fernando Piñon's book titled Patron Democracy. In 1990, he was elected county judge, having unseated the incumbent Andres "Andy" Ramos. Though he had no Republican opponent in the general election, former Mayor Tatangelo, at the age of seventy-seven, opposed his former mayoral rival Martinez for county judge as a write-in candidate. Martinez still prevailed with some 75 percent of the votes cast, but the county Republican leadership, headed by Esther Buckley, endorsed Tatangelo. After three terms as county judge, Martinez was unseated in the 2002 Democratic primary by Louis H. Bruni, a former member of the Laredo City Council from District 2. Thereafter, beginning in the fall of 2003, Martinez began teaching accounting at Texas A&M International University in Laredo.

In 2006, Martinez ran unsuccessfully for the Democratic nomination to represent Texas House District 42, having been defeated by the incumbent and still serving Richard Raymond of Laredo. In the primary Raymond fell .07 percent plus one vote short of an outright victory. He finished first with 11,806 votes (49.8 percent); Martinez trailed with 7,650 (32.3 percent). Two other contenders held the remaining 17.9 percent of the vote. In the runoff in April 2006, Raymond prevailed, 8,828 votes (57.8 percent) to 6,456 (42.2 percent). Oddly, in 2005, Martinez contributed $1,000 to Raymond's proposed run for the United States House of Representatives, a race that never materialized.

In 2017, the still staunchly Democratic Martinez emerged as one of the first persons in Webb County to endorse Beto O'Rourke, the U.S. representative for Texas' 16th congressional district, who expects to challenge Republican U.S. Senator Ted Cruz in the general election scheduled for November 6, 2018. Martinez claimed that Cruz has "alienated the majority of the senators ... We cannot afford somebody that has alienated the Senate that way. I've always felt that politics is the act of compromise. Let's reach a middle ground. In my opinion, Beto O'Rourke has that ability." Martinez said at a campaign stop that he sees no reason why O'Rourke won't match John F. Kennedy's 90 percent margin in Webb County in the 1960 presidential election.

Honors

In 2014, Martinez was honored with the "Higher Education Award" by the League of United Latin American Citizens, formally presented as part of the Washington's Birthday Celebration in Laredo. He is a past recipient of the Paul Harris Award from Rotary International, the St. George and Silver Beaver medals from the Boy Scouts of America, the Tejano Achiever Award from LULAC, and "Distinguished Alumni" in 2001 of Laredo Community College.

Martinez's namesake grandson, Mercurio Martinez, IV, was killed in an automobile accident in 2009 at the age of eighteen. Each year the community honors his memory with the "Mercurio Martinez, IV Teens in the Driver Seat, Annual 5K Run", sponsored by the Vidal M. Treviño School of Communications and Fine Arts, an entity of the Laredo Independent School District named for the late educator and State Representative Vidal M. Treviño.

References

Mercurio Martinez Wikipedia