Gloria Molina, political leader and pioneer of Hispanic women in California, dies of terminal cancer

A trailblazer among Hispanic women in California who served for decades in elected office, including as a member of the Los Angeles City Council and county superintendent, has died at the age of 74. due to a terminal form of cancer that he had been battling for the past three years.

In 1982, Hispanic pioneer Gloria Molina became the first woman elected to the California Assembly, becoming a national authority.

According to her daughter Valentina Martinez, Molina died at her Mount Washington home surrounded by family.

“Gloria has been battling terminal cancer for the past three years. She met this struggle with the same courage and resilience with which she lived her life. Over the past few weeks, Gloria has been energized by the love and support of our family, community, friends and colleagues. Gloria expressed her deep gratitude for the life she lived and the opportunity to serve our community,” Martinez said.

Gloria Molina was a longtime Democrat, serving five years in the California State Assembly in the 1980s and then winning election to the Los Angeles City Council in 1986, representing a district that included East Los Angeles and parts of the San Fernando Valley. In 1990, Molina won a seat on the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors and remained there until 2014, eventually resigning after term limits were introduced.

She made history in several of these roles, becoming the first Hispanic woman to serve on the Los Angeles City Council and later on the Board of Supervisors.

Molina was born in Montebello on May 31, 1948 to a Mexican mother and a Mexican-American father. She grew up in Pico Rivera as the eldest of 10 children.

In the 1970s, she became involved in the Chicano political movement, especially speaking out for women’s health. She will serve two years in the White House of President Jimmy Carter as a deputy in the presidential administration.

Last March, Molina announced that he had cancer, which he said he had been living with for three years, and was “very aggressive.”. She also said at the time that she wanted people to know that she wasn’t sad, but that she was lucky to have lived a “long, rich and beautiful life.”

“I am truly grateful to everyone in my life and proud of my family, career, my people and the work we have done on behalf of our community,” Molina wrote in the post.

Now, after his departure, his daughter also dedicated a few parting words, where he said that: “We will miss seeing artist Gloria as she designs and creates beautiful quilts that tell the story of our Mexican roots. and the teacher Gloria, who shares her passion with others so that they too can express themselves through this art.”

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Author: Armando Hernandez
Source: La Opinion

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