With their unexpectedly strong support for President-elect Donald Trump, Latino men shot to fame. They will soon be searching for results from their votes.
Hispanics in the United States are driving the growth of the labor force and will make up one out of every five workers by 2030, despite being younger than the general population. Latino men regularly expressed their need for additional job and business prospects as well as respite from the growing expense of living in interviews conducted before and after the election.
Hispanic males fall behind white men and other men in many areas, but they are generally doing better than Latinas and other groups in some quality-of-life categories.
Given that they have the House and Senate, the [future] administration has a huge work ahead of them. Abraham Enriquez, founder and president of Bienvenido US, a conservative Latino advocacy group that helped mobilize Hispanic voters for Trump and Republicans, stated that President Trump cannot afford to fail to deliver on some of the community’s top priorities.
For me as a young Hispanic man of Mexican heritage, what does it mean? Enriquez, 29, stated. My primary priority is becoming a homeowner. It’s the only way to create wealth for future generations.
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