Amáda Márquez Simula said she didn't run for mayor of Columbia Heights as a Latina. That's just who she is.
"I don't know any other way to be," she said. "I was running because I think that I can do some good things and I have the leadership skills to help our community move forward [and] be a bridge to bring more people into our council that represent our community."
Nevertheless, Simula's election Tuesday makes her the first person of color to hold elected office in Columbia Heights in modern times. A community organizer and political newcomer, she beat City Council Member Nick Novitsky by 10 percentage points, garnering nearly 55% of the votes.
Columbia Heights ranks among Minnesota's most diverse cities, with 35% of the city's 20,000 residents identifying as nonwhite. The City Council, which includes the mayor and four members, doesn't reflect the diverse community, Simula said. But she knew residents were ready for a change when others encouraged her to run.
"I'm a new, fresh face to those people," she said. "So for me to win by the amount of people I did really shows that the community is looking toward the future, not looking toward how it's been."
Simula, who declined to give her age ("I think it puts undue pressure on women to compare them to each other"), started laying the groundwork for politics back when she campaigned for the late U.S. Sen. Paul Wellstone. At the time, she was a young mother living in Edina and often mistaken as a nanny in the upscale and predominantly white city.
"I'm Mexican and have brown skin, and people just thought and assumed that I was the nanny taking these kids to the pool," she said.
Simula served as a Girl Scouts troop leader for 13 years and became involved in the community and volunteer work. When she moved to Columbia Heights seven years ago, she became fully engaged in grass-roots organizing by founding the nonprofit HeightsNEXT, a sustainable community movement.