Albert Bustamante
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Albert Garza Bustamante (born April 8, 1935) is a former member of the United States House of Representatives from Texas. A Democrat, he was a prominent Hispanic member of the House.
Bustamante was born and raised in Asherton, Texas to a family of Mexican migrant workers. After graduating from high school, he enlisted in the United States Army, serving for two years as a paratrooper. In 1958, he enrolled in San Antonio College, earning a general liberal arts degree. Bustamante then went on to major in education at Sul Ross State College. After earning his degree, he was hired as a teacher at San Antonio's Cooper Jr. High School.
In 1968, Bustamante took a job as an aide to Congressman Henry Gonzalez. In his first run for elective office in 1972, Bustamante was elected as a Bexar County, Texas Commissioner. He then was elected as a county judge in 1978 and served on the state's Jail Standard Commission.
Bustamante burst into the national spotlight in 1984, when he was successfully elected to Congress, surprising nine-term incumbent Chick Kazen in the Democratic primary for the 23rd District. He was unopposed in November, and was reelected three timesWhlie in Congress, he served on the Armed Forces Committee and helped to keep open several Texan military bases. He was also a member of the House Task Force on Drugs and Crime, in which he used his power to push for tighter border controls to keep out illegal drugs from Mexico. Bustamante called for defecit reduction, but also believed that more money should be spent on education and health care.
In 1992, Bustamante was investigated for fraud and racketeering, which ruined his reputation. He was not helped by the 1990s round of redistricting, which carved the 28th District out of most of Bustamante's territory and left a heavily Republican section of San Antonio in the 23rd. Bustamante's Republican opponent, popular newscaster Henry Bonilla, hammered Bustamante for neglecting the needs of his constituents and excessive junketeering. Although Bill Clinton carried the district, Bustamante lost to Bonilla by a shocking 38-point margin--the largest margin of defeat for an incumbent that year. He was convicted of criminal charges and served nearly four years in prison.
Since his release, Bustamante has faded from politics. He currently lives in San Antonio with his wife, Rebecca, and owns a local shopping center.