Go for Vo: To Austin Jan. 11

By Greg Moses

Zzine News

IndyMedia Houston / Austin / North Texas / NYC / LA

Texas Aggies love to say

that Highway Six runs both ways. At Beechnut St. in Houston, Highway Six runs into the rest of the

world.

Of 6,000 people living in the neighborhood at the Southeast corner of Highway

Six and Beechnut, 47 percent were born outside the USA. About half of them have become citizens,

according to the US Census Bureau (Census 2000, Tract 4539).

“Hubert Vo does represent

District 149,” says Rogene Gee Calvert, speaking by cell phone about the newly elected state

representative for the district that includes Highway Six between Interstate 10 and Beechnut. “It is a

district with many first generation immigrants like Hubert, and they feel like he understands their

issues.”

Calvert is president of the Houston 80-20 Asian American Political Action

Committee. During the campaign season, 80-20 endorsed Vo, knocked on doors for him, placed ads in

Asian media, and sent out campaign literature in five Asian languages. Now, with Vo’s slim electoral

victory being challenged in the Texas Legislature, Calvert is organizing to keep Vo in

office.

“We do not want to see his victory stolen away,” says Calvert. On Vo’s behalf,

Calvert is helping with a petition drive that aims to collect 10,000 signatures, and she is organizing

a delegation of Vo supporters that will appear in his behalf at the Legislature’s inauguration day,

Jan. 11.

According to sources close to Vo, the newly-elected rep is spending his days

with the people who elected him, listening again before he begins working in Austin.

“He

has an apartment in Austin, but he has his hands full back in the district,” reports our source. “His

schedule is as tight as it was in the campaign.” On Tuesday Vo attended a holiday party with the Alief

Super Neighborhood Council, a civic group that he belonged to before he decided to run.

“Oh, yes, I have seen him several times this month at different functions,” says 80-20 communications

chair Steven Pei. “He’s doing his homework.”

“It’s also important to stress that

Hubert has grassroots support from other communities as well,” says Pei. “Hubert has support among

Africans, African Americans, Hispanics, and Anglos.”

“We felt that Hubert represented

the community best,” says Calvert as she explains an endorsement process which requires a two-thirds

majority from 80-20 participants. “He has been successful in his own life, and he was running a

successful campaign. We took those to be good indications that he would also be a successful voice for

us in the legislature.”

80-20, explains Calvert, gets its name from a concept that

assumes any group of people will have 20 percent of its population loyal to one side of the political

spectrum and another 20 percent loyal to the other side. The challenge then becomes one of moving the

middle 60 percent to one side or the other to create an 80-20 bloc. In some races, 80-20 moves the

middle toward Republicans, in other races, like Vo’s, the middle moves toward a

Democrat.

In the legislature, Calvert and Pei want Vo’s help in passing a bill that would

give definition and funding to a Southwest Chinatown area East of Vo’s district. You can see a

colorful map of the area at, where else, chinatownmap.com (see link below).

“We want to

promote the area as a major tourist attraction,” says Calvert. But the area needs work first,

especially with lighting, police protection, and other infrastructure.

“Safety of the

community is the number one issue that keeps coming up at our meetings,” says Pei. “People want more

security in their neighborhoods.”

Meanwhile a source close to the Vo camp says that the

election challenge is “just chugging along” as the parties inspect about 200 names of voters that

Republicans allege cast illegal ballots.

“We have to see if their ballots were actually

illegal and who they voted for,” reports the source.

But it seems that a larger wisdom

should prevail when the challenge hits the chambers of the legislature. Does Texas want to understand

and develop the issues that work best for immigrants like Vo, create a Southwest Chinatown, and extend

Highway Six as a global highway that runs both ways? I don’t see why not.

Why not go

for Vo? It’s a simple thing to say, and a smart thing to do for Texas.

NOTE: 80-20

President Rogene Gee Calvert can be reached by cell phone at 832-723-4508.

See the map

of Southwest Chinatown

at:
http://www.chinatownmap.com/houstonswchinatownmap.htm

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s

%d bloggers like this: