Ray Aguilar


Ray Aguilar is a politician and businessman from the state of Nebraska in the Midwestern United States. From 1999 to 2008, he held a seat in the Nebraska Legislature, representing a district in the city of Grand Island. His appointment in 1999 made him the first Latino in the legislature. Aguilar is a member of the Republican Party.

Personal life

Aguilar was born October 24, 1947, in Grand Island. He graduated from Grand Island Senior High School in 1965, and attended Central Community College. He married in 1973; he and his wife, Susan Ann Aguilar, produced nine children. He worked as building and grounds supervisor for Grand Island Central Catholic middle and high school. He subsequently owned a janitorial service, which he operated at the time of his departure from the Nebraska legislature.

Political career

In 1996, mayor Ken Gnadt appointed Aguilar to the Grand Island city council, to serve the five months remaining in the term of a councilman who had moved outside the city limits. In 1998, Aguilar ran for election to the same council seat; he was defeated by incumbent Bob Sorensen, who received 892 votes to Aguilar's 850.
In 1999, governor Mike Johanns appointed Aguilar to fill a vacancy in the Nebraska Legislature, created by the resignation of Chris Peterson. Upon taking his seat, he became the first Latino in the Legislature.
In 2000, Aguilar ran for election to the seat. In the nonpartisan primary, Aguilar, a Republican, ran against Democrat Lonnie Logan, a member of the Hall County Board of Supervisors, and Libertarian Larry Gibreal, a realtor. When the primary election was held, Aguilar received 4183 votes, or 62.2% of the total; Logan received 2200 votes, or 32.7%; and Gibreal received 342 votes, or 5.1%. As the top two vote-getters, Aguilar and Logan moved on to the general election, in which Aguilar won the seat with 8090 votes, or 73.1% of the total; Logan received 2946 votes, or 26.6%; and there were 31 write-in votes, constituting 0.3%.
In 2004, Aguilar ran unopposed for a second four-year term in the legislature. Under Nebraska's term-limits law, he was ineligible to run for a third consecutive term in 2008. He was succeeded in the Legislature by Mike Gloor, a Republican from Grand Island.