Flores's parents, Margarito Flores and Lydia Solis Flores, retired in Laredo, Texas. Flores grew up in South Texas. He graduated from Laredo Martin High in Laredo and attended Laredo Junior College before graduating from Texas A&M University. Flores worked as a farm technician for Texas A&M Veterinary School then was accepted to the Texas Game Warden Academy in 1985.
Career
Flores retired as a Colonel Game Warden for Texas Parks and Wildlife. He is a former leader of Texas Parks and Wildlife’s statewide law enforcement division. He was the first Hispanic to hold that position.
In 2016, Flores ran for the Texas Senate District 19, losing to Democratic incumbent Carlos Uresti with about 40% of the vote. District 19 is geographically the largest district in the Texas Senate, with about 400 miles of the Texas–Mexico border, and it contains all or part of 17 counties and spread over more than 35,000 square miles in the southwestern portion of the state. The district is 66% Hispanic. The district is also 73% African-American and Hispanic.
Uresti resigned from his senate seat after being convicted of federal fraud and money laundering charges in February 2018, and a special election was called. Flores ran for the seat again, and in an upset, Flores won the September 18, 2018, special election for state senate district 19 over former state representative and U.S. Congressman Pete Gallego 57% to 43%. Flores took 81% of the Medina County, Texas vote, yielding him a 3,000-vote lead, which Gallego could not overcome. Flores will serve out the next two years and three months of a term formerly held by Uresti. Flores was endorsed by U.S. Senators John Cornyn and Ted Cruz, GovernorGreg Abbott, and Lt. Governor Dan Patrick. During the campaign he stated that his focus would be property tax reform, economic development, support for law enforcement, support for the unborn, and support for the 2nd Amendment.
Flores wants to lower Texas's property taxes. He believes that Texas taxpayers are overtaxed and the current tax rates are unsustainable. He wants to change the way property is being appraised. He wants a uniform methodology of appraisal that is consistent throughout Texas, instead of having 254 different counties using 254 different ways, limiting the role of individual chief appraisers in the each county. He wants the appraisers to be accountable to the voters. He wants the members of the board of appraisal districts to be voted in office, instead of appointed by taxing entities, making them directly accountable to the voters, removing the buffer that separates the taxing entities and the voters that currently exists. He has said, "The system is broken. We need some meaningful tax reform so you and I can keep our houses and we won’t be taxed out of our property. We want to pay our fair share, but it’s not right to have a system that’s not fair and equitable."
Flores and his wife Elizabeth, married in 1982, live in Pleasanton, Texas where he decided to retire after serving the State of Texas for 27 years as a state peace officer. They have two children and two grandchildren. Flores has six sisters who are all school teachers.