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Raul G. Salinas

Raúl González Salinas
Laredo Mayor Raul Salinas IMG 1949.JPG
Laredo Mayor Raul Salinas at the 2008 Veterans Day ceremony at Laredo Community College
Mayor of Laredo, Texas
In office
June 17, 2006 – November 12, 2014
Preceded by Elizabeth "Betty" Garcia Flores
Succeeded by Pete Saenz
Constituency City of Laredo, Texas
Personal details
Born (1947-11-08) November 8, 1947 (age 69)
Alice, Jim Wells County
Texas, USA
Political party Democratic
Spouse(s) Yolanda Salinas (married 1989-2012, divorced)
Profession Former FBI agent
Businessman

Raúl González Salinas (born November 8, 1947) is a private security consultant, a businessman, and a retired Federal Bureau of Investigation agent who is the former mayor of Laredo, Texas.

Elected to the first of two terms on June 17, 2006, Salinas described himself as a self-styled "political outsider." In that election, he defeated the eight-year city council member John Clifford Galo (born 1958) in a low-turnout election: 9,665 votes (52.75 percent) to 8,657 (47.25 percent). In 2012, Galo was handily elected to the Webb County commissioner's court for Precinct 3, a position which he still holds.

A native of Alice, the county seat of Jim Wells County east of Laredo, Salinas is a graduate of the University of Maryland in College Park, Maryland.

Salinas opposed the construction of the border wall along the Rio Grande. He claims that the wall would devastate Laredo economically because Mexican laborers sustain the local economy by as much as 40 percent.

Salinas's first term was extended to four and one-half years so that city elections henceforth coincide with the November general election of non-presidential even years. Salinas led in the first round of voting and then defeated the outgoing 8-year city council member Gene Belmares (born 1963) by a 2-1 margin in the runoff election held on December 11, 2010. Salinas successfully used the slogan "Still, The Right Man" in his reelection campaign. Belmares carried the backing of the Laredo Morning Times but finished with only 34 percent of the vote in a low-turnout election. At times the campaign bogged down in trivia, as each candidate attempted to take credit for the installation of speed bumps in a particular neighborhood. Salinas polled 12,783 votes to Belmares' 6,575.


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