DOWNEY, Calif. — A surge of migrants on the border. President Joe Biden’s debate efficiency. Excessive rates of interest. Phillip can tick off the explanations he voted for President-elect Donald Trump.
However that doesn’t imply the first-generation Mexican American is a full-throated Republican. And he certain doesn’t need his neighbors realizing how he voted.
“Downey is a small community,” he stated whereas strolling together with his spouse and two canines at nightfall alongside a quiet avenue of lush lawns and broad, flat streets. Supporting Trump antagonizes individuals round right here.
Downey, a suburb about 10 miles southeast of downtown Los Angeles, has turn out to be a touchdown spot for upwardly cellular and rich Latinos, a lot so it has been dubbed “the Mexican Beverly Hills.” And like many different elements of the middle- and working-class southeast county, the so-called Gateway Cities, it has seen a shift in assist towards Donald Trump.
Trump didn’t win any precinct in Downey outright, however he narrowed the hole between himself and his Democratic rivals, and in doing so, made for some awkward moments at household gatherings for individuals equivalent to Phillip and his spouse.
In Downey, Trump gained 18.8 proportion factors in November in contrast with the 2020 presidential election, which noticed a report turnout. Different cities within the southeast county moved even additional proper, although Democrat Kamala Harris nonetheless maintained a stable lead. The Trump bump between the 2 elections was 28.6 factors in Bell, 27.3 factors in Bell Gardens and 24.1 factors in Huntington Park.
“These numbers should be a wake-up call for Democrats,” stated Sara Sadhwani, an assistant professor of politics at Pomona Faculty. “They won these cities, but clearly their margin is declining. It presents a host of questions for the future of the Democratic Party and the extent to which they’re going to do outreach and listen to the largest growing segment of the American populace.”
The Trump phenomenon has altered the political panorama and the dialog at household dinners within the Gateway Cities, which like the remainder of Los Angeles County, are majority Democratic.
An in depth have a look at the information from the Los Angeles County registrar-recorder/clerk’s workplace present that in additional than a dozen southeast cities, there was a shift of 20 factors or extra towards Trump since 2020. In Downey, Biden had gained by 35.1%, whereas Harris gained by 16.3%, a distinction of 18.8 factors.
Phillip stated he voted for President Obama and isn’t the one one who has swung from blue to purple in his neighborhood.
The town of 114,000 is 75% Latino and most of the extra profitable residents made it there with a robust entrepreneurial spirit. The median family revenue of $97,000 is barely greater than the remainder of California, however the instructional stage is decrease, with a few quarter of all residents holding a bachelor’s diploma. This isn’t a metropolis constructed on outdated cash.
“Downey is what success looks like for Latinos,” stated Luis Alvarado, a political marketing consultant and former Republican who makes a speciality of municipal elections in southeast Los Angeles County. “We have always been conservative ideologically, culturally and religiously.”
Many Latinos now both assist or overlook Trump’s anti-immigration rhetoric and his guarantees of mass deportations, he stated.
Nationwide, an estimated 54% of male Latino voters forged their poll for Trump this election, in contrast with 39% of Latinas, in accordance with the NEP-Edison Exit Ballot. General, 51% of Latinos voted for Harris in contrast with 46% for Trump, in accordance with the ballot.
“We have shed immigration as an identifier,” Alvarado stated. “It doesn’t define us as Latinos and it leaves us the way the rest of America feels with issues of safety, economic advancement and leaving a legacy for our children.”
Downey isn’t inching rightward in a vacuum. Throughout blue California, voters have been annoyed with homelessness, the economic system and the rash of smash-and-grab robberies. They resoundingly rejected progressive measures and candidates.
An initiative that will have imposed harsher penalties for drug possession gained and one other that will have elevated the state minimal wage failed. Voters rejected efforts to finish pressured jail labor and to permit stronger hire management legal guidelines.
However the vitriol that Trump elicits has created an surroundings of self-suppression in cities that also have a big Democratic contingent.
“Many of us resonate with his policies, but hesitate to express our views due to the potential for judgment or retribution,” stated Mario Guerra, a police chaplain and Republican marketing campaign strategist who served on the Downey Metropolis Council for years. “Nobody wants that stigma attached to them, but there [are] a lot of closeted Trumpers out there.”
Guerra feels liberals have labeled Trump and his followers as bigots: “People are afraid to be seen as all those things that they call him — racist, anti-women, anti-gay rights and anti- immigrant.”
“I am not those things,” he added. “I am a refugee. I have two gay brothers. I am for everyone’s rights.”
For many of Downey’s historical past, it was a white farm city, then a hub of the aerospace trade. It was by no means a liberal bastion. Its neighborhoods evoked Midwest Americana however with palm bushes. It’s the house of the Carpenters, the primary Taco Bell and the oldest present McDonald’s. The house shuttle Challenger was constructed there and town is proudly restoring its authentic mock-up.
“The No. 1 thing that residents want from elected officials, from government, is protection. Protect their families and protect their property, and we give them that,” stated Downey Mayor Mario Trujillo, a homosexual Democrat who was simply reelected.
He’s not stunned by the rightward lean; for years it was well-known that the Metropolis Council was largely Republican. That modified in 2020, when progressives have been voted in. Then got here the recall of a tenants rights advocate, a vote of no-confidence for Dist. Atty. George Gascón and a metropolis coverage that prohibited flying the Pleasure flag on public buildings.
To Trujillo, who considers himself a average Democrat, it signaled a change in fact.
“The residents, a lot of them are entrepreneurs, well-to-do families and they do tend to lean conservative,” he stated.
Close to Gallatin Street, not everybody agrees.
“The majority of Latinos don’t accept Trump because he’s racist,” stated Rosa Hurtado, who not too long ago moved into the neighborhood.
Phillip stated he’s seeking to vote for whomever is greatest for him, his household and his enterprise. Promised tax cuts would assist his enterprise and he expects rates of interest to fall underneath Trump, so he can refinance. And although he stated immigrants who’re within the nation illegally are onerous employees, he sees Democrats providing them an excessive amount of.
“I don’t have a problem with immigrants,” he stated. “I have problem with them opening the floodgates.”
Down the road from the couple is a small mansion with an indication out entrance studying: “I’m voting for the felon,” as if anticipating detractors.
“I have a big Mexican family,” stated the lady who opened the door and solely recognized as Armeta. “And they all voted for Trump.”
Councilwoman Claudia Frometa stated voters in Downey have been sick of “financially supporting those that have crossed our borders during the illegal migration invasion.”
A Mexican immigrant, Frometa is the primary California Republican to carry the title of president for the Nationwide Affiliation of Latino Elected and Appointed Officers, a 50-year-old nonpartisan group based by Edward R. Roybal, a pioneering Eastside congressman who championed the underprivileged. She thinks liberals have gone too far.
Delicate-on-crime insurance policies “pushed by the left and the Los Angeles County district attorney,” the “illegal migration invasion” and inflation have performed a job within the Downey vote, she stated.
“Hispanics are not a monolith, and contrary to what the left has continued to push, along with mainstream media, Hispanics care about the issues that impact their everyday lives, wallets, families and put at risk their safety and security and that of their small businesses,” she stated.