When Flores was first married, she and her husband agreed that they could work in any field they wanted, except for politics. By the time she ran for mayor, however, both independently thought it was a good idea. As others, all men, began to announce their candidacies for mayor, she thought several were of questionable character. Flores spoke with then-Governor
Ann Richards at the 1997 National Conference of
La Raza about a potential run. Richards gave Flores advice and then her endorsement. Eight others would eventually throw their hats into the ring. She won her first term in a special runoff election in early 1998, winning 55.39% of the voted. She won a full four year term in the May 1998 election. Flores was the first
Mexican-American and
Tejana female mayor of a major American city along the United States' border with Mexico. Cross-border issues became a major concern for Flores, and she gained media attention when she suggested that border patrol agents should give illegal immigrants "a bottle of water and send them on their way." Laredo sits at the start of
Interstate 35, a major border crossing that carries goods from Mexico into the United States. Following the adoption of the
North American Free Trade Agreement in 1994, Laredo became one of the fastest growing metropolitan areas in the country. She is a
Democrat. ==Personal life==