Summary

Latino men played a key role in Donald Trump’s election victory, with 43-55% supporting him, drawn by promises of economic relief, job opportunities, and small business support.

Despite higher workforce participation, many Latino men face wage gaps, dangerous jobs, and lower educational attainment compared to other groups.

Some prioritize trade skills or entrepreneurship over college, seeking practical returns on investment.

Experts highlight the need for policies addressing economic barriers, job training, and health coverage to sustain their support.

Future voting will depend on whether these voters see tangible progress in achieving the American Dream.

  • @[email protected]
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    591 day ago

    I’m sorry, I can’t stop posting this. If “Did Not Vote” was a candidate, it would have gotten the most electoral votes and won in a landslide:

    We can do literally anything: protect the environment, enshrine the rights of women and minorities, hold billionaires and giant corporations accountable, make housing affordable for all, make minimum wage a living wage, etc. The moment we as a country overcome our apathy/despair in enough numbers to make these possible, I’ll blame people who voted for “the other guy”. Until then, we deserve this…

    • nifty
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      9 hours ago

      Tbf, the only votes which matter are in the battle ground states. Electoral college induces the sense of apathy and despair in many instances.

      • @[email protected]
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        04 hours ago

        I don’t know about yours, but my ballot had local candidates, judges, ballot measures, etc. I’m not perfect and haven’t voted every time in the past, but people vote even less on midterms when there’s not a presidential election!