Trump Got a Record 46% of the Latino Vote as Democrats Reject Hispanic Working Families
Going into election night 2024, many Democrats were hopeful about the chances of their presidential nominee, Vice President Kamala Harris.
Early on November 5, hours before the first returns came in, a chorus of polling experts declared that the race was “neck-and-neck,” with some even giving Harris the edge.
Some confident Democrats pointed to a survey by a renowned Iowa pollster that had Harris up in the red state by three points (the candidate would lose it by over 13).
Others listened to a liberal professor many media outlets compared to Renaissance astrologer Nostradamus, whose “13 Keys” model had assured a Harris win was inevitable.
LifeNews is on TruthSocial. Please follow us here.
Controversially anointed by Democratic elites at the last minute via an early August “virtual roll call,” Harris had replaced President Joe Biden as the party’s candidate almost immediately after Biden had dropped out of the race and endorsed her on July 21.
Harris was handed the nomination despite the fact that Biden – and not she – all but swept the Democratic primaries, winning over 14 million votes against only long-shot opposition.
However, this did not stop the vice president and her polarizing running mate Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz from running aggressively on the talking point that the Republican Party and its nominee Donald Trump are a so-called “threat to democracy.”
That approach proved ineffective when Trump ran the table in all seven battleground states, defeating Harris in a rout.
As Trump completed what has been hailed as the greatest comeback story in American political history, he also became the first Republican to win the popular vote in 20 years and captured a Republican record of 46% of the Latino vote.
Furthermore, Trump’s resounding win completely upended the Democrats’ “Obama coalition.” In addition to Latinos, Trump significantly improved his performance with young men, black voters, Asian-Americans, Arab-Americans, Muslim voters, and American Indians – all formerly reliably Democratic voting blocs.
The president-elect also tore down the blue wall for the second time, taking the states of Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin – which had voted Democratic in every presidential election from 1992 to 2012, and again in 2020.
Some well-known Democrats were quick to blame racism or sexism for the American voters’ thorough rejection of the Harris-Walz ticket.
Others instead looked inward – at the many reasons the party and its priorities were dramatically out of touch with the American people, opening an avenue for Trump’s epic comeback.
The people vs. elites
On the Sunday after Election Day, Sen. Chris Murphy, D-CT, made a series of posts to X (formerly Twitter) in which he stressed the “need to rebuild the left” in a more populist direction – similar to the Trump-Vance ticket’s winning message.
“Tuesday was a cataclysm, let’s not kid ourselves,” the Democratic senator said in a video message. “This is not a moment for small changes or reforms. This is a moment for a fundamental rebuild of the left.”
“First of all, we are not listening to the people we claim to represent,” Murphy continued:
We claim to be the party of the working class, the party of poor people. And yet we let interest groups and think tanks tell us what those people need. That’s why we end up with these relatively small-ball solutions.
“Americans are exhausted by a neoliberal economic order that has consolidated power in the hands of the few,” the Democrat added, “that has forced them to become global citizens instead of having some unique local identity or a true sense of being an American citizen.”
“People feel isolated, they feel impotent, they feel deeply anxious,” he noted. “Democrats spend no time actually matching policies to the way that people feel.”
Murphy stated that while he disagrees with Trump’s border security policy, it spoke “to a legitimate feeling that people have.”
The senator emphasized that his party needs to understand that Trump’s Republican Party starts “by examining the way that people are actually feeling, and then matching policies to the way that they’re feeling.”
“Now that’s something that the Harris campaign did not do,” the senator said. “And frankly, when leaders in our party like Bernie Sanders do it, they largely get shamed or shunned as dangerous populists.”
Murphy speculated that Democrats may resist populist messaging because if their party embraced economic populism “it would hurt our coalition, which these days tends to be higher-income people who don’t want the status quo fundamentally upset.”