MAYO was involved in
voter registration in South Texas. Founding member of MAYO Willie Velásquez was posthumously given the
Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1995 by President
Bill Clinton for his work with voter registration. MAYO did well at getting voters registered, but they were not successful in getting the
Hispanic voters out to the polls to vote, especially in metropolitan areas. School walkouts were a major part of MAYO’s approach to achieving equality for Mexican Americans. They staged walkouts at least 18 times, which helped enable Mexican Americans to take over seats on Texas
school boards. The major walkouts were in Crystal City, Kingsville, Edgewood and Lanier High Schools in San Antonio. By becoming members of previously all-white school boards, MAYO was able to participate in deciding what was best for their own people. MAYO led to the creation of Raza Unida Party (The Race United), a third party that found many of their first members in the ranks of MAYO, who played the central role in the creation of La Raza Unida Party, or RUP, which quickly spread to other states. MAYO was later integrated into RUP and became the youth arm of the party. MAYO adopted a logo, appropriated from
Aeronaves de México, an
Aztec warrior inside a circle. It was later used in the Raza Unida Party logo as well. RUP candidates won elections in the 1970s. The
League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), one of the leading Hispanic groups in Texas, was considered by MAYO to be too soft in its approach to achieving equality for Mexican Americans. Because of MAYO's tactics, which were diametrically opposed to LULAC's, it became known as the militant arm of the Chicano movement. ==Notes==