New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Latino voters are target for election misinforma­tion

- By Christine Fernando and Anita Snow

PHOENIX — As ranchera music filled the Phoenix recording studio at Radio Campesina, a station personalit­y spoke in Spanish into the microphone.

“Friends of Campesina, in these elections, truth and unity are more important than ever,” said morning show host Tony Arias. “Don't let yourself be trapped by disinforma­tion.”

The audio was recorded as a promo for Radio Campesina's new campaign aiming to empower Latino voters ahead of the 2024 elections. That effort includes discussing electionre­lated misinforma­tion narratives and fact-checking conspiracy theories on air.

“We are at the front lines of fighting misinforma­tion in our communitie­s,” said María Barquín, program director of Chavez Radio Group, the nonprofit that runs Radio Campesina, a network of Spanish-language stations in Arizona, California and Nevada. “There's a lot at stake in 2024 for our communitie­s. And so we need to amp up these efforts now more than ever.”

Latinos have grown at the second-fastest rate, behind Asian Americans, of any major racial and ethnic group in the U.S. since the last presidenti­al election, according to a Pew Research Center analysis, and are projected to account for 14.7%, or 36.2 million, of all eligible voters in November, a new high. They are a growing share of the electorate in several presidenti­al and congressio­nal battlegrou­nd states, including Arizona, California and Nevada, and are being heavily courted by Republican­s and Democrats.

Democratic President Joe Biden has credited Latino voters as a key reason he defeated Republican Donald Trump in 2020 and is urging them to help him do it again in November. Given the high stakes of a presidenti­al election year, experts expect a surge of misinforma­tion, especially through audio and video, targeting Spanish-speaking voters.

“Latinos have immense voting power and can make a decisive difference in elections, yet they are an undermessa­ged, under-prioritize­d audience,” said Arturo Vargas, CEO of NALEO Educationa­l Fund, a national nonprofit encouragin­g Latino civic participat­ion. “Our vote has an impact. These bad actors know this, and one way to influence the Latino vote is to misinform.”

In addition to radio, much of the news and informatio­n Latinos consume is audio-based through podcasts or on social media platforms such as Facebook, WhatsApp and YouTube. Content moderation efforts in Spanish are limited on these platforms, which are seeing a rising number of rightwing influencer­s peddling election falsehoods and QAnon conspiracy theories.

The types of misinforma­tion overlap with falsehoods readily found in other conservati­ve media and many corners of the internet — conspiracy theories about mail voting, dead people casting ballots, rigged voting machines and threats at polling sites.

Other narratives are more closely tailored to Latino communitie­s, including false informatio­n about immigratio­n, inflation and abortion rights, often exploiting the traumas and fears of specific communitie­s. For example, Spanish speakers who have immigrated from countries with recent histories of authoritar­ianism, socialism, high inflation and election fraud may be more vulnerable to misinforma­tion about those topics.

Misinforma­tion on the airwaves also is particular­ly difficult to track and combat compared with more traditiona­l, textbased misinforma­tion, said Daiquiri Ryan Mercado, strategic legal adviser and policy counsel for the National Hispanic Media Coalition, which runs the Spanish Language Disinforma­tion Coalition. While misinforma­tion researcher­s can more easily code programs to categorize and track text-based misinforma­tion, audio often requires manual listening. Radio stations that air only in certain areas at certain times also can be difficult to track.

“When we have such limited representa­tion, Spanish speakers feel like they can connect to these people, and they become trusted messengers,” Mercado said. “But some people may take advantage of that trust.”

Mercado and others said that's why trusted messengers, such as Radio Campesina, are so important. The station was founded by Mexican American labor and civil rights leader César Chavez and has built a loyal listening base over decades. At any given moment, as many as 750,000 people are listening to the Chavez Radio Network on the air and online, Barquín said.

“They will come and listen to us because of the music, but our main focus is to empower and educate through informatio­n,” she said. “The music is just a tactic to bring them in.”

Radio Campesina's onair talent and musical guests often discuss misinforma­tion on air, answering listeners' questions about voting, teaching them about spotting misinforma­tion and doing tutorials on election processes such as how to submit mailin ballots. The station also has hosted rodeos and music events to register new voters and talk about misinforma­tion.

They allow listeners to call or text questions on WhatsApp, a social media platform especially popular with immigrant communitie­s but where much of the misinforma­tion they see festers. In March, the station partnered with Mi Familia Vota, a Latino advocacy group, for an on-air show and voter phone bank event to answer voter questions.

“We know that there are many people who are unmotivate­d because sometimes we come from countries where, when it comes to elections, we don't trust the vote,” said Carolina Rodriguez-Greer, Arizona director of Mi Familia Vota, before she shared informatio­n on the show about how voters can track their ballots.

The organizati­on began working with Spanish media outlets to dispel misinforma­tion after seeing candidates such as former Arizona gubernator­ial candidate Kari Lake spread election lies in 2022, Rodriguez-Greer said.

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