Progressive Ideals: Are Latinos Ready to Embrace Them? MINDSETTER™ Molina Flynn

Joseph Molina Flynn, MINDSETTER™

Progressive Ideals: Are Latinos Ready to Embrace Them? MINDSETTER™ Molina Flynn

Jose Molina Flynn
The current political climate has driven a divide in the Democratic party. Young progressives are ready to move the party in a new direction. Traditional Democrats, while frustrated with the current party, are not so ready to embrace the entirety of the progressive agenda. Where though, does that leave Latino Democrats?

The progressive agenda is mostly standardized. Candidates who wish to be embraced by the progressive wing of the Democratic Party align with similar messaging. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s platform is one example of a highly successful progressive platform. Ocasio-Cortez is the current Democratic nominee to take the U.S. Representative seat in New York’s 14th District, having defeated the incumbent Rep. Joe Crowley, an establishment Democrat who has served as Representative for roughly twenty years. Ocasio-Cortez’s platform includes the following:

  • Mobilizing against climate change
  • Medicare for all
  • Housing as a human right
  • Gun control/assault weapons ban
  • Immigration justice/abolish ICE
  • Women’s rights
  • LGBTQIA+ rights
  • Higher education for all
  • Restore Glass Steagall
  • Clean campaign finance

 

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In Rhode Island, some Democratic candidates are pushing similar platforms. Perhaps the most audible progressive campaign in Rhode Island is that of Rep. Aaron Regunberg. He is currently running against Lieutenant Governor Dan McKee, an establishment Democrat, in the Democratic primary. Representative Regunberg has made no secret of the fact that he is not afraid to ruffle feathers to push his ideals. His platform is very similar to that of Ocasio-Cortez and can be found here.

Some would argue that the existence of the progressive wing has moved some traditional Democrats to the left. For instance, Governor Raimondo used her position to advocate for free higher education at C.C.R.I. and ultimately delivered on that promise (R.I. Promise). While campaigning for reelection, she has promised to expand on that program and deliver free education at the State’s four-year institutions.

The State’s growing Latino population has and will continue to benefit from free education. For a lot of Rhode Island’s Latinos, the ability to take on burdening debt to pursue higher education is not realistic. With the R.I. Promise program, C.C.R.I. has seen an increase of enrollment in Latino students. The expansion of this program will help all Rhode Islanders, but it will especially help those who are overburdened with education costs.

Medicare for all is another issue with deep impact in the Latino community. Healthcare costs are prohibitive, as is the cost of health insurance. This is true even after the Affordable Care Act. The threshold to qualify for Medicaid is an extremely low income and families who earn just above the threshold are priced out of the health insurance market. That segment of the community comprised of blue-collar low-wage earners will benefit most from Medicare for all.

Where Latino voters who identify as Democrats may distance themselves from progressives is on “social issues.” There are large factions of Latinos who are not ready to embrace progressive positions on issues which contradict religious doctrine. Those include, among others, a woman’s right to choose and LGBTQIA+ rights. What is not clear is whether Latinos will easily give up on other progressive ideals because of the conflict with these issues.

Finally, there is the never-ending debate over immigration. The chasm on immigration is wide. Some Latino voters embrace comprehensive immigration reform which would provide a path to legalization for those who are currently in the United States undocumented. Some support ideas such as “sanctuary cities.” Others do not.

One certainty remains: the statistics coming out of this year’s election across the United States will help determine how deep these divides truly are and whether Latinos are ready to move to the left with the rest of the progressive democrats. Stay tuned.

Joseph Molina Flynn is a family & immigration attorney with offices in Boston & Providence. He is the current president of the RI Latino Pac and the RI Latino Civic Fund. 


GoLocal Statewide Poll - Conducted by Harvard's Della Volpe - June, 2018

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