
How Mayor Gina Ortiz Jones views her 1st year in office
As Mayor Gina Ortiz Jones marks one year in office this week, she tells Axios she's proud of what she's done and is working with her City Council colleagues following what some consider a fragmented start to her tenure.
Why it matters: The mayor's publicly fraught relationships with councilmembers who share similar political views have drawn scrutiny and, in some instances, left the mayor on the losing end of major policy votes.
What they're saying: Conflict between Jones and councilmembers has limited the City Council's accomplishments, local political consultant Andrew Solano tells Axios.
The other side: "I will always, and have always, made an effort to engage with my colleagues," Jones says.
Zoom in: Early on, the council moved ahead with plans for a new downtown Spurs arena despite the mayor's wish to slow down the process. Councilmembers then blocked Jones' ability to unilaterally change their policymaking process.
Yes, but: Jones has had victories, too — most prominently, the council moved city elections from May to November.
The big picture: Roughly half of the council — including the mayor — lean politically progressive, but a coalition has yet to materialize.
State of play: Jones is the first San Antonio mayor in modern history to be censured by her colleagues. City Council voted 8-1 in February to hand Jones the formal reprimand, after the Express-News reported that Jones berated Councilmember Sukh Kaur, who filed a complaint over the incident.
Zoom out: "Chaos" at City Hall is a good thing, former councilmember and two-time conservative mayoral candidate Greg Brockhouse recently wrote in his newsletter about local politics.
What we're watching: Jones soon faces some of the biggest votes of her tenure: how to handle major city budget cuts; whether to raise city property tax rates for the regular budget and bond program; and whether to raise rates for the San Antonio Water System and CPS Energy.