Oregon Voices Podcast: S1E13 - Teresa Alonso Leon, Democratic Candidate, OR Senate District 11

Program Description

Teresa Alonso Leon was four years old when she was separated from her family at the border, placed in an orphanage until her father found her, and lost her voice completely in the silence between those two moments. She has spent the rest of her life finding it again, first as the oldest of six children interpreting for her parents through a home purchase at eleven, then as a farm worker's daughter navigating a country with no systems built for families like hers, and finally as the first immigrant Indigenous Latina elected to the Oregon legislature, where she passed the driver's license law, strengthened sanctuary protections, and raised nearly a million dollars from a community that had never seen itself on the ballot before. She left in 2022 to run for Congress, watched the seat flip Republican, and came back because her community knocked on her door and asked her to. Now she is running for Oregon Senate District 11, carrying thirty years of lived experience into a political moment that is asking the same questions her childhood asked, just louder and with more at stake. In this conversation, Teresa talks about what it means to legislate from a body that remembers, why affordability and safety mean something completely different depending on which side of the system you grew up on, and what gets lost when the people making the laws have never had to be the child who holds everything together. This is what the table is missing when people like Teresa are not at it.