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These Young Nevada Latino Voters Plan To Caucus And Challenge Misrepresentations

Andre Anaya (left) and Chris Torres share their thoughts on the election and life as a Latino in America.
Noah Glick
/
KUNR Public Radio
Andre Anaya (left) and Chris Torres share their thoughts on the election and life as a Latino in America.

As Nevadans get ready to caucus this weekend, the nation should be paying attention. That’s because unlike Iowa and New Hampshire, where the first caucus and primary were held, respectively, Nevada’s population more closely mirrors the U.S. According to the U.S. Census, almost one-third of the state is Hispanic or Latino.Listen to this story.

Nevada, like much of the West, also skews slightly younger. So, ahead of the Saturday caucuses, we talked with three Latino college students in Northern Nevada. They all say they plan to vote, but feeling like their voices matter is a challenge.

Here’s what they shared about some major issues they face in their lives.

‘Different types of Latinos’

Andre Anaya is a sophomore at the University of Nevada, Reno. He said there are many misconceptions about his community.

“Mexicans are a majority of the Latino community, but they’re not all of it. And there are a lot of different types of Latinos,” he said. “Central Americans, they’re different. Even South Americans, they’re different. And just trying to make those distinctions, I think is pretty important.”

Anaya is half-Mexican and half-Salvadoran.

Chris Torres, a senior at UNR, agreed. His parents are from Mexico.

“Latino people come from far and wide and really just kind of putting everyone in that box really diminishes the amount of voice there is there,” Torres said.

Junior Nestor Lopez said he gets asked all the time, “What part of Mexico are you from?”

Lopez’s parents came here from Guatemala.

On bills, health insurance

The students say most of the Latinos they know work to pay for their own college education, which isn’t all that unusual. But they say most Latinos also work to help pay family bills.

Torres said he’s lived in the same house with his mom for more than 12 years.

“How much longer can we actually stay here?” he asked. “How much longer until we actually have to cram myself, her, my two sisters into an apartment?”

To help pay rent, he took on a second job. That, at least temporarily, cost him his Medicaid coverage.

“I’ll lose the health care, that was my kind of way of living. I was just like, ‘You know, I’m making more money, so I guess if something were to come happen, maybe I’ll be ok,’” he said.

After a lengthy appeal process, Torres eventually got his coverage back. Lopez, the sophomore, doesn’t have health insurance. But that isn’t as pressing as another contentious issue: immigration.

“My mom, she received a letter a long time ago from immigration,” he said. “We know where you live. You need to move, or we’re going to deport you. And we legit had to find another apartment.”

Dehumanization of Latinos

All of these students know friends and family who’ve been affected in this way. But for Anaya, there’s something else on his mind that’s becoming more critical.

“What concerns me about the country is a push to a dehumanization of Latinos,” he said.

That push he said is coming from politicians and even the President.

“And that, in turn, causes their supporters to then have those opinions and then that influences their interactions with Latinos,” he said. “And it hurts. It hurts the community.”

Lopez said the Latino community as a whole is misrepresented.

“A lot of Latinos struggle,” he said. “Working hard jobs, their kids speaking Spanish at home, English at school. And I just want them to understand that not all Latinos are bad. We don’t all sell drugs.”

But negative perceptions about the community persist. And that, he said, blocks many people from sharing their opinions — or even voting — for fear of being misunderstood or harassed.

“I think one of the things that hinders them from voting or from sharing their experiences, thinking that my voice doesn’t matter, when in reality it does,” Lopez said.

Copyright 2021 KUNR Public Radio. To see more, visit KUNR Public Radio.

Noah Glick is from the small town of Auburn, Indiana and comes to KUNR from the Bay Area, where he spent his post-college years learning to ride his bike up huge hills. He’s always had a love for radio, but his true passion for public radio began when he discovered KQED in San Francisco. Along with a drive to discover the truth and a degree in Journalism from Ball State University, he hopes to bring a fresh perspective to local news coverage.
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