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Donald Trump once launched his campaign by calling Mexican immigrants “rapists.” He built an empire of fear around walls, deportations, and ICE raids — and yet, by 2024, nearly half of Latino voters chose him. From the outside, it feels impossible. How could the man whose presidency defined cruelty at the border — family separations, mass detentions, promises of mass deportation — be embraced by the very communities he targeted? But the answer isn’t simple. Because “Latino voters” aren’t a monolith. They’re a country within a country — shaped by class, faith, geography, and history. And if you look closely, the story isn’t one of betrayal. It’s about belonging, identity, and a political system that still doesn’t know how to listen.
Donald Trump once launched his campaign by calling Mexican immigrants “rapists.” He built an empire of fear around walls, deportations, and ICE raids — and yet, by 2024, nearly ha...
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