German Trejo is a Mexican-American political consultant and president of Battleground Solutions. The company serves Democratic candidates and progressive non-profit organizations.[1]
Trejo was born in Morelia, Mexico.[2] He moved to the US in 1998, and attended Ohio State University, at first majoring in architecture,[3] and later in political science and international studies.[2] He graduated in 2004. At Ohio he was vice president of its Council of Hispanic Organization,[4] an unsuccessful candidate for vice president of the Undergraduate Student Government,[5] and co-chair of its Underrepresented Constituency Committee.[6]
After graduating Trejo was appointed, from 2006–2009, to an unpaid position as consejero (adviser) to the Mexican government's Institute of Mexicans Abroad.[7] He has worked in three presidential races: Wisconsin in 2004, Ohio in 2008, and Florida in 2012.[2] In 2004 he served as the Hispanic Outreach Director in Wisconsin for the Kerry-Edwards campaign.[8] As of 2007 he was the southeastern Ohio director of the Ohio Democratic Party.
Trejo was involved in 2009 in Centro Mexicano, a proposed community center in Columbus, Ohio. Trejo promoted the center's plans to house a Mexican consulate, a training center for Latinos, and a business services center targeting the Hispanic community.[9] He presented the center as a nonprofit organization while trying to secure funding, though he had not incorporated it as a nonprofit with the state,[10] and allegedly told investors that it was financially secure. Seven months after it was supposed to have opened, the center filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, listing $615 in assets and over $168,000 in debts.[11]
In 2011 Trejo founded G&T Consulting, a political-consulting firm catering to Latino Democratic candidates.[12] [2] Since 2013 he has served as the president of Battleground Solutions.[1] In 2013 he joined the board of Democracy Win.[13]