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The Media Is Obsessed With the “Latino Vote” – There Is No Such Thing

Latinx people are heterogeneous and really represent a community of communities.  This has been the subject of considerable critical Latinx Theory literature written long ago.  See, for example, here, here, here.  

That heterogeneity has come to mind in the discussion of the results of Election 2020.  How can Latinx in Florida support Trump in such large numbers?  How can Latinx persons in the Western states have such different views.  Basically, they are not the same people.

Jorge Loweree for the American Immigration Council explains:

“Political pundits have given a great deal of airtime to examining the voting patterns of `Latinos’ in the United States.

Exit polls show that President Trump fared well with Latino voters, particularly in Florida. And while concerns regarding the efficacy of exit polling in measuring Latino voting patterns and inclinations have been raised for years, it does seem likely that the president will have fared better with some Latino voters in this election than in 2016.

This is despite his overtly racist rhetoric and countless policies that disproportionately impact Brown and Black people in the United States and at our southern border.

How is this possible?

Lumping `“Latinos’ Together Ignores Cultural Differences

The answer is complicated, but a fundamental issue is the fact that we tend to categorize a broad and diverse group of Brown and Black people together using a single moniker – `Latinos.’

In the U.S., the term `Latino’ is generally understood to refer to 60 million people of Latin American heritage who live in the United States. This broad term is used to lump people of Mexican, Nicaraguan, Cuban, Brazilian, and Venezuelan heritage – among others – together into one category.

Critically, the term is largely meaningless to the very people that it is used to describe.

There are clear differences between and among Mexicans, Cubans, and Brazilians, etc. that are obvious and understood by people we describe as Latinos in the United States.

The `Latino Vote’ Doesn’t Account for Historical Differences

Some of the most important differences among Latinos are cultural and historical.

Many first-generation Cubans and Venezuelans, for example, experienced brutal political violence before coming to the United States. Because of this, they are particularly sensitive to messages centered on communism and socialism. Republicans used messaging that concentrated on fears around socialism in the run up to the election in southern Florida, where Cubans are heavily concentrated.

The political preferences of some Cubans are also informed by a belief that President Kennedy’s role in the Bay of Pigs worked to cement Fidel Castro’s grip on power.

Younger generations of Cubans tend to be more democratic in their views though, so Cubans as a whole split along party lines fairly evenly. Cubans have also enjoyed special protections under U.S. immigration law that aren’t afforded to other Latinos, reducing the effect of immigration-related messaging that tends to serve as a primary focus for Democrats to Latino communities.

By contrast, the experiences of people of Mexican heritage tend to be more varied given the length of time they have lived in the United States and their geographic diversity. While the first largescale flow of Cubans began in 1959, many Mexican families have been in the United States for hundreds of years. Many families in places like South Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, California, and portions of Colorado have lived in those areas since they were part of Mexico. Historically, the greatest concerns for people of Mexico have been economic security, general violence, government corruption. And the proximity of Mexico to the United States has played a significant role in the migration patterns between the two countries. Mexicans are also disproportionately impacted by immigration enforcement and some of the most draconian policy changes announced by the Trump Administration.”

 

On other election news. Immigrants who have naturalized had an impact in the 2020 election in crucial states, including Arizona and Florida. The American Immigration Council provides fact sheets that highlight demographic data on immigrant populations in every state.  Read more: U.S. Immigrants by State

KJ

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