Miami Herald (Sunday)

Hispanics will be hit hard by the coronaviru­s and could back Biden over Trump

- BY ANDRES OPPENHEIME­R aoppenheim­er@miamiheral­d.com

By the time the coronaviru­s pandemic subsides, and Americans turn their attention to the November elections, Trump will face a battle that’s more uphill than before to win the Latino vote. Millions of Hispanics work in the hotel, restaurant and tourism industries, which will be the hardest hit by the crisis.

More than 14.3 million U.S. workers are employed by the food service and accommodat­ion sector, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor statistics. A significan­t number of them are Latinos. Go to any restaurant in Miami, Las Vegas, or New York — if you can find one that’s open — and you’ll discover it in a minute.

In addition, likely Democratic candidate Joe Biden has done better than expected among Latino voters in the recent primaries in Florida and Arizona. And the Biden campaign will make the most of the former vice-president’s past role as the Obama administra­tion’s point man for Latin America.

Few people remember, but Biden was President Obama’s de facto special envoy to Latin America between 2012 and 2016.

Biden made 16 trips to countries in the Western Hemisphere since 2009, including four trips each to Brazil and Mexico, and three visits each to Colombia and Guatemala, his campaign says.

“President Trump’s policy toward Latin America is limited to Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua,” says Juan Gonzalez, one of Biden’s Latin American advisers. Gonzalez told me that Trump’s policy has been more about winning votes in South Florida than about advancing U.S. interests in the region. “It has been tough talk, but no concrete actions,” he said.

The Trump administra­tion’s sanctions against Venezuela should be backed by Latin America and Europe, but Trump’s isolationi­sm has antagonize­d traditiona­l U.S. allies, and makes it more difficult to build an effective coalition against Venezuela’s dictatorsh­ip, he added.

“Because of his ‘America first’ nationalis­m, Trump cannot build an internatio­nal alliance against [Nicolas] Maduro, whereas Biden can,” Gonzalez told me.

The Biden campaign also plans to lash out against Trump for his failure to provide significan­t assistance to the nearly 5 million Venezuelan­s who have fled to Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and other countries in the region, or to provide Temporary Protected Status to Venezuelan refugees in the United States.

While the Obama administra­tion forked out $6 billion for the estimated 5 million refugees during the

Syria crisis, the Trump administra­tion has committed only $580 million for almost the same number of Venezuelan refugees, Biden aides say.

The Trump administra­tion announced in September that it had committed a total of $376 million in aid to Venezuelan refugees in Latin American countries, according to a State Department release at the time.

Biden advisers say that the No. 1 step in the region by his administra­tion would be to repair relations with Mexico.

Biden would place a moratorium on pending deportatio­ns to review whether potential deportees have been granted their civil rights, and would engage the Mexican government to jointly address immigratio­n, security and environmen­tal issues, they say.

Then, they add, in addition to building an effective internatio­nal coalition to restore democracy in Venezuela, a Biden administra­tion would reverse the Trump administra­tion’s restrictio­ns on Cuban exile travel and remittance­s to the island.

In 2016, Trump won 28 percent of the Latino vote. That support had climbed to 30 percent earlier this year, when the stock market was at its record high and there was near fullemploy­ment. The convention­al wisdom among pollsters is that a Democratic nominee will need at least 70 percent of the Latino vote to win in November.

But the coronaviru­s crisis has changed everything. Now, unemployme­nt among Latinos is likely to soar. And the fact that Trump shamefully minimized the coronaviru­s threat for two months — wasting precious time that he should have used to prepare the country for the crisis — will further hurt his re-election chances.

If nominated, as seems almost certain, Biden is likiely to shoot for more than 75 percent of the Latino vote. If things don’t change, he may get it.

Don’t miss the “Oppenheime­r Presenta” TV show at 8 p.m. E.T. Sunday on CNN en Español.

Twitter: @oppenheime­ra

 ?? Getty Images ?? Hispanics, especially in the restaurant, tourism and other service industries, will be hurt by the coronaviru­s crisis.
Getty Images Hispanics, especially in the restaurant, tourism and other service industries, will be hurt by the coronaviru­s crisis.
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