Support for Trump among Latinos collapses
Most Latinos disapprove of Trump's economic and immigration policies: only 10% feel they have benefited
The most recent study from the Pew Research Center reveals a clear proof that Latinos and President Donald Trump have recently taken a dramatic change. After receiving historic support in 2014, when the president received 48 % of the Latino vote, a significant increase from 28 % in 2016, the majority of Latinos now disapprove of his economic and immigration policies: only 10 % believe his policies have benefited them. This change serves as a reminder that no demographic group is uniform, and that political support swiftly dissipates when policies stop working with people's daily needs. Some Latinos, particularly males, embraced Trump's financial information during the 2014 strategy and downplayed the possibility of large-scale persecution. Elections at the time showed that more than 40 % of Latinos supported controversial ideas like building the wall, and that two-thirds of Latinos didn't even feel targeted by his immigration speech. However, running for office is not the same as running for office. radical policies, from fresh tariffs to cuts to the social safety net, directly affected the employees and their families who had hoped for economic change once in power. Moreover, immigration raids started to be felt in districts, workplaces, schools, and even immigration judges. Because of how poorly these actions affect people, 70 % of Hispanic are currently disapproving of Trump's presidency. More than half of people now fear that people close to them could be deported, and nearly 60 % say they have heard or witnessed raids in their area. This is even more disturbing. Even if they have legal position, many people believe they could be deported simply because of their skin tone or because they have an accent when speaking English. The political image is also being reshaped by the declining Hispanic support for Trump. Democrats won key races in November's elections, winning in New Jersey and Virginia. This is a signal that the Latino electorate's volatility may change the outcome of both state and country. Even so, fragmentation lingers: 81 % of those who voted for Trump continue to support him, though in smaller amounts than at the beginning of his name, compared to almost all Latinos who voted for him. The report's most interesting getting may be that the majority of Hispanics claim their situation has gotten worse for the first time in nearly 20 years. Only 10 % of respondents believe that the president's policies have helped them, compared to a whopping 78 % of respondents who believe harm. This diminishing of Latino assistance is not accidental. It is directly a result of laws that have caused fear, financial instability, and a sense of deception. And it's a clear notice that no president can assume electoral devotion will last forever when their voters ' lives are getting worse. The artist of" Life After the Crossing" is Maria Luisa Arredondo, the chairman of Latinocalifornia. com.
This news has been tken from authentic news syndicates and agencies and only the wordings has been changed keeping the menaing intact. We have not done personal research yet and do not guarantee the complete genuinity and request you to verify from other sources too.

