Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Brokaw’s cluelessne­ss shows why we need Latino journalist­s

- Esther J. Cepeda Columnist

I don’t usually write about the shortage of Latino journalist­s in American newsrooms because the issue is wellknown to those who have the power to change it (yet never do) and dull inside baseball to everyone else.

However, the issue was brought to the fore on national TV Sunday morning when Tom Brokaw essentiall­y whipped out a salt shaker, seasoned his foot, stuffed it in his mouth and proceeded to chew during NBC’s political show “Meet the Press.”

He started out by noting the rise of an “extraordin­ary, important, new constituen­t in American politics: Hispanics.” Then he immediatel­y began spouting false informatio­n.

He declared with complete confidence that Latinos “will come here and all be Democrats.” First of all, the country of origin of most Latinos 35 and younger is already the United States. And furthermor­e, both polls and actual election voting data show that large swaths of Hispanics are Republican and voted for Trump in the last two elections.

Then Brokaw really chomped down: “I also happen to believe that the Hispanics should work harder at assimilati­on. That’s one of the things I’ve been saying for a long time. You know, they ought not to be just codified in their communitie­s but make sure that all their kids are learning to speak English, and that they feel comfortabl­e in the communitie­s. And that’s going to take outreach on both sides, frankly.”

Latinos in the U.S. have been studied to death by academics, statistici­ans and government agencies, and there’s no question that they assimilate as fast as other ethnic groups historical­ly have, and that it’s even happening so quickly that Latinos are starting to worry about a loss of language and culture that aids in family cohesion and other issues of identity.

English is so commonplac­e among Latinos that they get most of their news from major English-language media organizati­ons — who are failing them if their most respected journalist­s can’t even be bothered to learn basic data points about one of the largest population­s in this country.

There was anger and, frankly, hurt, over Brokaw’s remark about assimilati­on — and his equally offensive anecdote suggesting that older white Americans have anxiety about “brown grandbabie­s.” But there was also a sense of outrage that once again a white man was on an important national TV show serving as an unquestion­ed expert on Hispanics.

Veteran journalist­s like Maria Hinojosa and Ray Suarez are ready and willing, as am I, to talk about the border, immigratio­n, Latinos and much more. Others who would be more than eager to talk about these issues include journalist­s like Tanzina Vega of The TakeAway, politicals­how anchor Soledad O’Brien, the investigat­ive reporter Aura Bogado and so many others

As the “Meet the Press” episode wrapped up, the last word went to Yamiche Alcindor, the White House correspond­ent for the PBS “NewsHour.” Of Haitian descent, Alcindor set the record straight:

“We also need to adjust what we think of as America. You’re talking about assimilati­on. I grew up in Miami, where people speak Spanish, but their kids speak English. And the idea that we think Americans can only speak English, as if Spanish and other languages wasn’t always part of America, is, in some ways, troubling.”

It is terribly upsetting when educated people like Brokaw reveal their common misconcept­ion that bilinguali­sm or bicultural­ism is anything less than an asset in an increasing­ly diverse America and global economy.

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