It’s laughable that in 2020, this country still needs to be reminded, Sesame Street style, that Latinos are not a monolith & the Latino vote is a mirage. This misconception comes from how little u bother knowing us, how superficially u cover us & how absent we are in newsrooms.
Off the top of my head, here's just a few reasons why "the Latinos" can fall all over the political spectrum on just about any given topic:

1) Geography. There's endless political differences between Cubanos, Mexicanos, Argentinos, Dominicanos, Central Americans, etc.
2) Religion. We've got a ton of Catholics, but our connection to God/ church / spirituality is complicated depending on our guilt levels, how hardcore our moms were growing up, generational shifts, political views like gay rights/abortion, etc.
If you've ever had a tia turn evangelica, you'll appreciate the big rifts that exist between religions.

There's also our gazillion interpretations of la Virgen and Jesus Chist.

You've got Latino Jews, Santeria worshipers, curandero believers, atheists, the agnostic, etc.
3) Skin color. From the moment you're born, ur skin color, eye color, hair color determines where u fall on a spectrum of real & perceived Latino racism that vastly impacts ur lot in life & your view of the world. You don't shed the impact of this racism when u move to the U.S.
4) Generational Impact: Some Latinos who have been in the US for 4, 5 generations. Their ancestors existed on this soil before the Declaration of Independence was signed.

Other are 1st generation or immigrants. Some live with their heart split between the U.S. & their homeland.
Wealth: The kind of wealth you were born into or have attained in the U.S. can have a big impact on how you vote.

In this country, Latinos make up a significant part of the service industry, but we're also business owners, doctors, journalists, architects, politicians, etc.
6) Past politics, wars: Due to U.S. intervention & other reasons, there's been plenty of turmoil in Latin America.

Often when immigrants come north, they bring those political views with them. Salvadorans, e.g., are still split along political lines from the 1980 civil war.
7) Assimilation Level: There's lots of pressure to "Americanize" in the U.S.

To shed your language. Your accent. Your connections to your traditions, culture, home country.

Where you fall on this push and pull of your identity can also influence your political views.
8) Immigration. Sure, immigration, but not in the predictable "Open up the borders & save all the immigrants" kind of way.

Latinos, for all the reasons stated above, can have vastly different views on every aspect of immigration: the wall, deportations, even child separation
There's so many other factors that influence what Latinos do at the ballot box:

Our indigenous roots/erasure
Family alliances, bonds
Feminism/Misogony
Where we end up living in the U.S. (i.e. Latinos in Alabama vs. Latinos in L.A.)
Our faith or lack of faith in this country
Am I missing something?

Please chime in. I'd love to hear your thoughts 🙏
Please think twice before you lump Latinos into a single category & stop chasing the "Latino vote" unicorn each election

We make up 1/5 of this country. Focus on us year-round

Better yet, make space for us in newsrooms, publishing houses, Hollywood so we can represent ourselves
I should add that on top of all of this there's many other things that sway Latinos, the same way other voters are swayed:

- What they read on social media
- How engaged/not engaged they are in politics
- How good/bad their life has been under the current administration
The “Latino Vote” tonight 🤦🏽‍♀️ #Election2020
I encourage you to read some of the great work my @latimes colleagues have been doing on Latinos and #Elections2020 👇🏾
More on 8) A key thing that may impact how “Latinos” vote is the immig status of loved ones. Some families have been composed of U.S. citizens for generations. Others include a mix of citizens, perm residents, visa overstayers, TPS holders, relatives who had to cross the border..
One more: military service. In some cases, I’ve seen so many factors be at play that would make you believe a “Latino” would vote for a democrat, but they don’t because they’ve picked up more conservative, Republican values after serving in the Army, Marines, Navy a few years
And of course, as several of you have aptly pointed out, education level can be a significant factor. But being more educated doesn’t mean you’ll be more liberal. That piece of the puzzle is influenced by all the other variables listed above.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Esmeralda Bermudez

Esmeralda Bermudez Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @BermudezWrites

3 Nov
Last night, I came across a nugget of history that will hopefully make everyone smile on this stressful today.

El Salvador, like so many places, has a rich indigenous history. Panchimalco, an indigenous community south of the capital, was known for a curious custom...
In the early 1900s, nativos here believed that the eleventh day following the start of a full moon was the best day to make healthy, strong babies. (Any day before this day would produce "cowardly men")
So each day, on this special day, at around 9 o'clock at night, indigenous leaders walked through the village with a drum, proudly shouting:

"Now is the time to conceive, gentlemen!"
Read 6 tweets
30 Oct
The U.S. left vast numbers of migrant children in custody far longer than previously known, living out a chunk of their childhoods in a government shelter system that’s at best ill-equipped to raise them & at worst a factory of abuse & trauma. latimes.com/world-nation/s…
A 17-year-old from Honduras spent a good part of her childhood, living in refugee shelters & foster homes in Oregon, Massachusetts, Florida, Texas & New York — inexplicably kept apart from the grandmother and aunts who had raised her.
Cut off from contact with her family, she’s begun to self-harm & was prescribed a cocktail of powerful psychotropic medications. She hadn’t been taught English or learned to read or acquired basic life skills such as cooking. She hadn’t been hugged in years. @aurabogado @iff_or
Read 4 tweets
29 Oct
Spread the word👏🏽 On Nov. 12, the @latimes will launch a much-anticipated, FREE weekly newsletter, the Latinx Files, to highlight the issues affecting our community — from the pandemic to the recession to immigration... latimes.com/california/sto…
This newsletter hosted by @fidmart85 will also include critiques of our exclusion from mainstream culture emerging from Hollywood, the latest Bad Bunny release & everything in between. Sign up at latimes.com/latinx-files or latimes.com/newsletters to get it in your inbox 🥳
Nearly half of Los Angeles is Latinx. So is 40% of California and nearly 20% of the United States. Yet our stories have been too rarely told by the media — yes, including the @latimes. The Latinx Files is part of The Times’ broader effort to rectify that.
Read 4 tweets
28 Oct
This is Julio Urías with his dad. The now 24-year-old Mexican pitcher finished the job and brought L.A. a World Series Dodgers win after nearly 32 years. Image
As a kid, Julio has a bad left eye but a thunderbolt left arm. He stepped into his first baseball league in Culiacan, Mexico, when he was five years old. google.com/amp/s/syndicat…
Urías’s bad left eye was caused by a benign tumor that has been with him since birth.

He underwent three surgeries by the time he was two. As he grew, the swelling sort of molded to his bone structure around the eye. People were not sure if Urías could see out of it. Image
Read 10 tweets
21 Oct
Due in large part to U.S. intrusion, I was separated from my mom at age 2. By the time I met her at age 5, she was a stranger to me. Every day, since then, our relationship has suffered deeply, painfully due to our time apart. What these families have endured is utterly inhumane.
The headlines come & go, but people need to know this kind of trauma lasts a lifetime. To have a parent with you one day, gone the next, is the worst kind of mind game for a child. No matter what adults tell you, you blame yourself. You never feel whole.
For us in El Salvador, the 1980s were a nightmare. The U.S. spent billions funding a brutal war that took away just about everyone I knew before the age of 3. My mom managed to escape north by foot, but she had to leave me behind. That moment shaped everything about us.
Read 12 tweets
3 Oct
Who is Nathan Apodaca, the viral TikTok star?

“I’m Native-Mexican. I’ve always embraced both sides of my dad’s heritage, my mom’s heritage. Cholo all the way. I live it. I love it. It don’t matter. They can label me, whatever they want, but I’ll live it.” latimes.com/entertainment-…
He lives in his native Idaho and works at a potato warehouse 🥔
His dad is of Mexican descent and his mom hails from the Northern Arapaho tribe in Wyoming.
Read 14 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!