Posted Oct 24, 2024
Top advisers to the Kamala Harris presidential campaign held a press conference on Oct. 16, including children who were separated from their parents under the highly criticized Trump administration immigration policy, as a warning of what a second term under the former president could bring for the Latino community.
The press conference in Doral, Florida, came ahead of a Univision town hall last Wednesday, at which GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump spoke to undecided Latino voters.
Four children at the press conference recounted stories of being separated from a parent by immigration officials during the Trump administration and the lasting trauma it caused. Their full names and ages were not provided by the campaign.
For Latinos who think that when Donald Trump insults immigrants, or when he talks about mass deportation that you’re thinking he’s talking about somebody else, oh no, no, he’s talking about you.”
U.S. Rep. Veronica Escobar
With 12 days until Nov. 5 and early voting underway in many states, both campaigns have tried to court Latino voters, as they are the second-largest group of eligible voters.
“The Latino vote will decide this election,” said Democratic Texas U.S. Rep. Veronica Escobar, who serves as co-chair for the Harris campaign, said at the press conference.
Harris campaign spokesperson Kevin Muñoz said that for the next 12 days, Democrats will continue to reach out to Latinos and stress “the threat that Donald Trump is to Latino communities everywhere.”
Harris looks for Latino support
The 2024 presidential election is essentially a dead heat between Harris and Trump. Latino voter preferences largely resemble the 2020 presidential election, when President Joe Biden defeated Trump 61% to 36% in earning the Latino vote, according to the Pew Research Center.
Harris, the Democratic nominee, currently has a smaller lead over Trump with Latinos, 57% to 39%, according to the Pew Research Center.
Escobar warned what a second Trump administration could bring to the Latino community.
“I hear a lot of Latinos who say that they want to vote for Donald Trump, that they appreciate some of his policies,” she said.
Escobar said that Trump has not only promised to carry out mass deportations, but go after pathways to legal immigration. She argued that architects of some of the former president’s harshest immigration policies are top level advisers, like Stephen Miller, who has proposed eliminating legal immigration like humanitarian parole programs and Temporary Protected Status.
Miller has also proposed a program to strip naturalized citizens of their U.S. citizenship — an initiative that Miller said would be “turbocharged” under a second Trump administration.
“For Latinos who think that when Donald Trump insults immigrants, or when he talks about mass deportation that you’re thinking he’s talking about somebody else, oh no, no, he’s talking about you,” Escobar, who represents the border town of El Paso, said.
Escobar said there would be no guardrails for a second Trump administration and programs like family separation could be implemented. The separation occurred at the border as asylum-seeking parents were put into criminal detention and sometimes deported.
“These kids who have lived through horrific trauma, through the pain of being separated from their parents, what you heard from them moments ago will be far worse if Trump gets a second term,” she said. “In Donald Trump’s first term, he had people around him who actually tried to stop him. In a second term, not only will those guardrails not exist, but those people who were there to stop him in the first place are long gone.”
Trump has declined to say whether he would resume family separations if given a second term, also known as the zero-tolerance policy.
“Well, when you have that policy, people don’t come. If a family hears that they’re going to be separated, they love their family. They don’t come. So I know it sounds harsh,” Trump said during a CNN town hall in May 2023.
The Biden administration established a task force to reunite the 3,881 children who were separated from their families from 2017 to 2021.
The Department of Homeland Security has reunited about 74% of those families, but there are still 998 children who have not been reunited.
Ariana Figueroa is a Reporter with States Newsroom. This article is republished from Arizona Mirror under a Creative Commons license.
- Immigration Detention Center Contractor Sues Over California Health Inspections - December 9, 2024
- Transgender Coloradans Brace for an Anti-LGBTQ+ White House Administration - December 9, 2024
- Beware the Toxic Chemicals at Dollar Stores - December 9, 2024