AP
September 14, 2015
Spanish-language
radio is fixated on the 2016 presidential campaign, sparked by
Republican Donald Trump's caustic remarks about immigrants, mainly
Mexicans, and a GOP
field of contenders trying to out-duel each other on the contentious
topic of overhauling immigration law.
Hispanics
are "literally tuned in," says Alex Nogales, president of the National
Hispanic Media Coalition. "They are working in construction, working in
the fields, working
in the hotels — they don't have time to look at television. They listen
to radio."
Spanish-language
radio has for decades been the electronic bridge linking America and
successive generations of Hispanic newcomers seeking to understand their
new way
of a life in a new land, especially on immigration matters, said
Dolores Ines Casillas, a University of California professor and author
of "Sounds of Belonging: U.S. Spanish-language Radio and Public
Advocacy."
It's
the Hispanic community's "acoustic ally," said Casillas, one that
"provides a sense of anonymity for a legally vulnerable population."
She
said Mexicans during the Great Depression relied on radio to keep tabs
on the federal government's removal of 500,000 to 1 million Mexican
immigrants and Mexican-Americans
because they were supposedly taking jobs away from whites. In the
1980s, tens of thousands of Hispanic immigrants here illegally learned
from radio how to apply for a federal amnesty program approved under
President Ronald Reagan.
Today,
Spanish-language radio has lit up from Trump's remarks about criminals
coming from Mexico and women coming to have "anchor babies." So, too,
the GOP presidential
front-runner's proposals to build a border wall and deport all of the
estimated 11 million people here illegally, before allowing the "good
ones" to return.
People of Mexican descent make up nearly two-thirds of the nation's estimated 54 million Hispanics.
Nogales
said Trump's immigration message has fired up millions of Hispanics
frustrated with both major parties for failing to find compromise on
legalizing those who are
here against the law.
Immigration
advocates and others have used Spanish-language radio in specific
markets to pounce on Trump and other Republican candidates.
In
Las Vegas, the state's largest union and immigrant organization
saturated the Spanish-language airwaves with an ad denouncing Trump.
"Mr. Trump says he wants to be
president to make America great," said the announcer. "We think America
is great."
The
ad urged listeners to take part in an August rally, which drew about
1,000 people in a march to the Trump International Hotel Las Vegas. "We
got a really strong turnout,"
said Bethany Khan, speaking for Culinary Union Local 226. More than
half of the 55,000 members are Hispanic.
Nevada is one of several swing states where both parties are courting Hispanic voters.
Carlos
A. Sanchez, coordinator of political campaigns for the liberal People
For the American Way, calls Spanish-language radio "a powerful tool" for
reaching Hispanics
not easily accessible through other media.
He
said his organization has produced Spanish-language radio ads against
Republican Marco Rubio in Denver and Miami, and against Wisconsin Gov.
Scott Walker in Milwaukee.
This
year's presidential contest features two candidates — Jeb Bush and
Rubio — who speak Spanish fluently. Bush goes back and forth in English
and Spanish in speaking
at town halls and with the media, especially in south Florida.
Unlike
conservative talk radio in English, where personalities such as Rush
Limbaugh, Sean Hannity and Laura Ingraham dominate, Spanish-language
radio lacks a particular
voice with a national following. Citizen activists, immigration
attorneys and others tend to do the talking.
The
U.S. has more than 500 radio stations with a Spanish-language format,
reaching an estimated 15 million Hispanics. But only about 30 stations
carry news or talk programming,
according to the Pew Hispanic Center.
That
means Spanish-language radio listeners get an earful of commentary from
unusual sources, said Federico Subervi, a former Kent State University
professor who has studied
Hispanic media for decades.
"A
deejay at a station who would not normally say anything about politics
and the immigration debate is now talking about it," Subervi said.
"Thanks to Donald Trump."
Subervi
said only the major Spanish-language radio markets of New York, Los
Angeles, Chicago and Miami are covering presidential campaign news. And
the coverage varies
from city to city, reflecting the diversity of the nation's Hispanics.
In
Miami, where Spanish-language radio has long been popular among the
city's large, conservative Cuban community, Carines Moncada, an
afternoon host of "Cada Tarde (Every
Afternoon)," empathized with Americans who support Trump.
"I
can't criticize an American who can identify with a Donald Trump who
says we have to solve this problem," she said on the air. "We have to
protect the border."
But
Trump has taken heat in Los Angeles, where listeners of top-rated radio
host Ricardo "El Mandril" Sanchez ridiculed "el hombre del peluquín"—
the man of the toupee.
Trump later had a woman in an audience touch his hair to show it is
real, and Sanchez invited Trump to be on his show.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com



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