Latino Vote ‘Up for Grabs,’ Says UMD Political Scientist
Scholar Grades Nominees’ Attempts to Win Key Electorate
During the 1960 presidential campaign, Jacqueline Kennedy appeared in a television spot with an unprecedented pitch. Seeking to earn Latino support for her husband, John F. Kennedy, she spoke entirely in Spanish. Kennedy went on to win 85% of the Mexican American vote.
Sixteen years later, incumbent candidate Gerald Ford was handed a plate of tamales at a San Antonio campaign stop. Before taking a bite of one, he failed to remove the husk, signaling his cultural ignorance. Coined the “Great Tamales Incident,” the faux pas cost Ford the state of Texas, some said.
Old clips of those two seminal moments captured the attention of then-graduate student Alejandro “Alex” Flores. Now an assistant professor of government and politics at the University of Maryland, Flores has tracked Latino outreach efforts over the years, culminating in the 2024 presidential battle in which both candidates are wooing Spanish speakers in unparalleled ways.
As the Latinos population in the U.S. increases, political ad spending to court them has skyrocketed. In the battleground of Nevada, ad spending has surged 724% in Spanish-speaking outlets compared to 2020, according to Bloomberg.
“Both candidates see Latino voters as up for grabs rather than predetermined,” Flores said.
Until recently, forging such inroads wasn’t as high a priority. During the aughts, amid legislative efforts to make English the official language of the United States, candidates converted existing ads into Spanish by “running them through Google Translate, using a generic voiceover and calling it a day,” Flores said.
In 2015, then-candidate Donald Trump derided fellow candidate Jeb Bush for speaking Spanish to reporters in Miami. Later in the campaign, Trump tried to curry favor with Latinos by posting a Cinco de Mayo photo of a taco salad, which didn’t help his cause, Flores said.
But the candidate evolved. During the 2020 campaign, Trump produced a Spanish ad that was cut into three versions, using Mexican, Cuban and Puerto Rican dialects and slang—"some of the most sophisticated Spanish political messaging ever seen,” Flores said. Elsewhere, Trump and Democratic nominee Joe Biden traded barbs in ads that ran exclusively on Spanish outlets, underscoring what Flores called “the first truly bilingual campaign.”
Also that year, eight Democratic candidates spoke in Spanish on a primary debate stage, something that would have been unfathomable a decade before, Flores said.
But such direct appeals can also risk alienation. Flores conducted an experiment in 2018 by presenting participants with nearly identical ads featuring Jeb Bush, one in English, the other in Spanish. After watching the Spanish version, bilingual participants were more likely to agree with Bush’s immigration policies—even though the ad never mentioned immigration. But for English-only speakers, the findings were reversed, even among Democrats.
During the current presidential contest, each candidate has a distinct Latino outreach strategy. Vice President Kamala Harris is leaning into the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, an appeal to voters with roots in countries like El Salvador, Venezuela and Chile with histories of coups and contested elections, Flores said.
Meanwhile, he added, Trump routinely calls Harris a “San Francisco socialist,” with allusions to communism regimes in Cuba and socialist nations in the Americas.
Trump’s efforts took a hit this week after a comedian speaking at his rally in New York City called Puerto Rico a “floating island of garbage.” That remark could cost him votes in Pennsylvania; it has the largest number of Puerto Ricans—a half-million—among battleground states and more than five times Biden’s 2020 margin of victory there, Flores said.
With five days until the Nov. 5 election, Flores discussed notable ways each candidate has courted Latinos, grading each effort.
Read More of John Tucker's article in Maryland Today
Trump photo by AP Photo/Matt Rourke; Harris photo by Rebecca Noble/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Published on Thu, Oct 31, 2024 - 10:01AM