Obama era Electoral politics , October 19, 2010 Mexican Americans made significant electoral strides during the
Obama Era. In 2010, the Republican
Brian Sandoval was elected governor of
Nevada; he was the first Latino to ever do so. That same year, the Republican
Susana Martinez became the first woman and Latina to be elected as governor of
New Mexico and was the first Republican Latina governor in U.S. history. Also in 2010,
Joseph García was elected the first Latino
lieutenant governor of Colorado in the state's history. During the
2012 United States presidential election, President Obama ran against the former-governor of Massachusetts
Mitt Romney. During the campaign, Romney sparked outrage amongst many Mexican and Mexican American officials when he suggested the economic disparities between the United States and Mexico were the result of the "hand of providence".
Latinos voted overwhelmingly for President Obama's re-election in 2012, when he earned as much as 71% of the community's vote. In response to their overwhelming defeat,
Reince Priebus, the chair of the
Republican National Committee, ordered an "autopsy report" to assess deficiencies and paths forward for the party. The report called for greater inclusion of Mexican Americans, Latinos, and other minority groups, stating, "If Hispanic Americans hear that the GOP doesn't want them in the United States, they won't pay attention to our next sentence. It doesn't matter what we say about education, jobs or the economy; if Hispanics think that we do not want them here, they will close their ears to our policies." The report, however, was largely ignored by the GOP in the years ahead.
Immigration . In the 2010s,
nativism in the United States increased, particularly in border states like
Arizona. In 2010, the
Arizona State Legislature proposed and passed the
Support Our Law Enforcement and Safe Neighborhoods Act (SB 1070). Critics of the bill argued it was a fundmantally racist law designed to legalize
racial profiling. In
Arizona v. United States (2012), the
Supreme Court overturned three provisions of the bill, including: requiring "legal" immigrants to carry registration documents at all time; allowing state police to arrest any individual for suspicion of being undocumented; and making it a crime for undocumented people to search for or hold jobs in the state. Despite its overturning, the bill had negative social effects on the Mexican and Mexican American communities, particularly for children and youth. In the same year Arizona passed SB1070, it also passed
Arizona House Bill 2281, effectively barring
Mexican American Studies (history and literature) from being taught in the state's public schools. with a group of
DACA-recipients in 2017. On June 15, 2012, President
Barack Obama announced an
executive branch memorandum known as
Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA). This change to
immigration policy allowed eligible undocumented individuals brought to the country as children to receive a renewable two-year period of
deferred action from
deportation and become eligible for a
work permit in the U.S. (without providing a path to citizenship for recipients).
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) began accepting applications for the program on August 15, 2012, and in less than one year, over half a million people applied to the DACA program. The next year, in 2013, a
bi-partisan group of eight
United States Senators—known as the
Gang of Eight—wrote the first draft of the
Border Security, Economic Opportunity, and Immigration Modernization Act of 2013. The bill would have provided a path to
citizenship for millions of undocumented Americans. It passed the Senate with a strong majority—68–32, with 14 Republicans joining all Democrats; however, the
United States House of Representatives under Speaker
John Boehner did not act on the bill, and it expired at the end of the
113th Congress. officers. During his time in office, President Obama was known in the Mexican American community as the "Deporter in Chief". Between 2009 and 2015, his administration removed more than 2.5 million people from the country, though some analysts claimed these numbers were "misleading" due to the way they were calculated. During his time in office, the
Department of Homeland Security initiated two policies which represented a major shift from prior administrations. First, DHS began placing undocumented border crossers through formal
removal proceedings; second, it made non-citizens "with
criminal records" the agency's top deportation target. Thus, when faced with criticism for his administration's record high deportation numbers, President Obama responded by saying, "The statistics are actually a little deceptive ... we've been apprehending folks at the borders and sending them back. That is counted as a deportation even though they may have only been held for a day or 48 hours." Nevertheless, Obama faced significant criticism for his failure to pass immigration reform and for the detrimental effects of deportation on families' lives.
Gentrification One of the most serious issues facing urban Mexican Americans in the 2010s was residential displacement through
gentrification. In
San Francisco at this time, the predominantly Latino neighborhood, the
Mission District, during the rapid expansion of
Silicon Valley, created a
housing shortage, which incentivized
investors to buy properties in historically
low-income neighborhoods (like the Mission) in order to renovate them and sell them at higher rates to tech workers. As a result, many of the neighborhoods'
taquerias,
bakeries,
bars, and
auto mechanic shops were replaced with luxury
condominiums, organic
ice cream stores, international
art galleries, and upscale
cafes. Significant resistance to the Mission's
gentrification emerged, including the "
restorative economics" of La Cocina Community Kitchen, the
resistance art projects of the
Clarion Alley Mural Project, the
San Francisco tech bus protests, and the "radically inclusive"
social services provided by the Dolores Street Community Services Shelter. In Los Angeles, gentrification affected the traditionally Mexican American neighborhoods of
Echo Park,
Highland Park, and large swaths of
East Los Angeles, particularly the neighborhood of
Boyle Heights. As white, college-educated young people increasingly moved to Los Angeles in the 2010s, they wanted to live in "hip", "urban", "edgy" and importantly, affordable, neighborhoods. Their presence increasingly pushed rent up and made the neighborhoods unaffordable to long-time residents. In Boyle Heights, this process was sped up by the arrival of a
subway station, called
Mariachi Plaza station, which made the neighborhood even more desirable to young white gentrifiers wanting easy access to the rest of Los Angeles. In 2016, significant controversy arose when the message "Fuck White Art" was spray-painted on the entrance to the Nicodim Gallery in Boyle Heights, especially when the
LAPD classified the graffiti as a "
hate crime". Modern commentators compared gentrification to the
urban renewal projects of the 20th century and connected urban displacement to American
capitalism,
racism, and
colonization. in
Chicago Gentrification affected many major urban Mexican American populations in the country, including in cities like
San Diego,
Albuquerque, and
Chicago. In the historically Mexican American neighborhood of
Pilsen in Chicago, working class families experienced high levels of displacement due to rising rents and property taxes. Pilsen (which had grown as a Mexican American enclave in the 1960s and 1970s when expansions to the
University of Illinois at Chicago's campus forced them into the neighborhood) became a "tourist attraction" in the 2010s, where sanitized versions of "Latinoness" were marketed to developers and new potential residents. The result was the opening of new businesses catered primarily to upscale non-resident visitors and recent arrivals. Pilsen's primary tool to resist gentrification was a
grassroots effort to designate the neighborhood a
historic landmark.
LGBT rights Parade. LGBTQ+ rights made significant strides in the 2010s. Between 2010 and 2019, public support for
marriage equality rose by over 19 points, and 2011 marked the first time in U.S. history that more people supported same-sex marriage than opposed it. In 2011, President Obama formally ended the policy of "
Don't ask, don't tell", allowing openly identified
gay men and
lesbians to serve in the
U.S. military. In 2015, the
U.S. Supreme Court ruled in
Obergefell v. Hodges that same-sex marriage was a constitutionally protected right under the
14th Amendment. Around the time of the Supreme Court's ruling, Latino support for marriage equality was amongst the highest of any ethnic group. Despite these significant strides, however, the Mexican American and Latino LGBT communities continued to struggle with many challenges. In the aftermath of the
Great Recession, an approximately 4.2 million youth experienced
homelessness in the U.S., of which 700,000 were
unaccompanied minors. Of these 4.2 million, estimates range that between eleven and forty percent were
LGBTQ, many of whom were Mexican American or Latino.
Transgender equality also remained a major issue for many Mexican Americans. In the 2010s, black and Latino
transgender women experienced
homicide rates widely disproportionate to their percentage of the overall population. The failure of the Obama administration or mainstream LGBT organizations to address any of these difficulties created outrage amongst the LGBT Mexican American and Latinx communities. In 2015, the activist
Bamby Salcedo disrupted the opening session of the
National LGBTQ Task Force's annual conference to protest the white LGBT community's continued ignorance regarding violence against transgender women of color. In the 2010s, LGBT Mexican and Latino
ICE detainees also experienced alarmingly high rates of
sexual abuse in U.S.
immigration detention centers. The undocumented activist
Jennicet Gutiérrez interrupted a speech by President Obama during a White House LGBT celebration dinner in 2015 to protest violent detention center conditions for LGBT Latinos.
"Build that wall!" . From the start of
Donald Trump's campaign for president, he faced accusations of racism and discrimination against Mexicans and Mexican Americans. In his announcement speech in August 2015, Trump said the United States had become a "dumping ground" for unwanted people from other countries and received pushback in particular for his statement: "When Mexico sends its people, they're not sending their best. They're bringing drugs. They're bringing crime. They're rapists. And some, I assume, are good people." The comment was interpreted by many to imply that
immigrants from Mexico had been "sent" to the U.S., and that many could be generalized as "criminals and rapists". In June 2016, Trump was again accused of racism when he said he would be unable to receive a fair hearing from the Mexican American judge
Gonzalo Curiel because, "The judge, who happens to be, we believe, Mexican ... [has] an absolute conflict ... I'm building a wall. It's an inherent
conflict of interest." The
border wall was one of the central themes of Trump's 2016 campaign, with many of his rallies featuring the chant, "Build that wall!" Numerous commentators noted the racial and
nativist connotations underlying the campaign pledge to build a wall. Studies conducted during the 2016 presidential election showed negative
online discourse surrounding Latinos was so severe that it negatively affected the community's
mental well-being. Nevertheless, Trump won at least 18% of the Latino vote in 2016. and
ICE, collaborated in raids. While in office, the Trump administration unleashed a series of controversial policies affecting Latinos. On May 7, 2018,
Jeff Sessions, then Trump's
attorney general, announced a new "
zero tolerance" policy at the U.S.-Mexico border, meaning any person apprehended crossing the border without documentation would be charged criminally and any children accompanying them would be held separately. Though the policy was ended by executive order within a month, more than 500 children remained separated from their parents more than two years later. During the
2018 midterm elections, Trump politicized the
Central American
refugee crisis, claiming "terrorists" and "gang members" were secretly hiding alongside women and children in order to gain entry into the United States. After the midterm elections, the Trump administration adopted the "Remain in Mexico" program, which essentially sought to shut down
asylum entry into the country. The policy resulted in a
humanitarian crisis, as tens of thousands of refugees were forced to live in makeshift tent encampments in Mexico while they awaited an asylum hearing. Trump's efforts on the border resulted in the erection of over 53 miles of new border wall and the renovation of over 400 miles of existing border walls; this wall construction sparked outrage for its impact on
indigenous communities. During the Trump years,
Immigration and Customs Enforcement also collaborated with other U.S. law enforcement agencies, such as the
U.S. Marshals, to conduct large "crime raids", during which hundreds of people were arrested and deported if found to be undocumented. In fact, in 2019, ICE conducted the largest single-state immigration raid in U.S. history.
Trump protests march in
Phoenix, Arizona. The 2010s saw levels of
mass protest unseen in the United States since the
Civil Rights movement of the 1960s. In 2017, the
Day without Immigrants protested President
Donald Trump's plans to build a
border wall and to potentially deport millions of
undocumented immigrants. In 2018,
protests against Trump's
family separation policy occurred in over 700 cities and towns in the United States, many under the title, "
Families Belong Together". Also in response to the Trump's family separation policies, widespread calls emerged to shut down
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), usually expressed under the slogan "
Abolish ICE". In 2019, as the Trump administration sought to end the
DACA program, the
United States Supreme Court agreed to hear their case.
DHS v. University of California created significant controversy, and major protests in support of "Dreamers" occurred across the country. Major American corporations also voiced their support for the DACA program, and the Supreme Court ultimately upheld the program. Mexicans Americans were also involved with many of the major social movements during the Trump presidency, including the movement for
Black Lives Matter and
racial justice, the
Women's March (the Chicana activist
Carmen Perez was one of four national co-chairs of the 2017 March), and
gun control movements like
March For Our Lives. According to some scholars, the intense activist energy during the Trump presidency motivated young Mexican Americans to adopt a political identity of "neo-Chicanismo", defined by ethnic pride, cultural heritage and expression, and protecting immigrants' rights. This younger activist generation also actively adopted
gender neutral language, such as the terms "
Chicanx" and "
Xicanx" as a way to push back against
gender bias in politics, society, and activism. visits a memorial to the victims of the
El Paso shooting.
El Paso shooting In the 2010s, the amount of
white nationalist domestic terrorism increased dramatically. There was a large surge in
white supremacist and other
hate group membership during the
Obama administration, and the United States saw a record number of
hate crimes committed during the
first Trump administration. In 2019, one of the largest
mass shootings against Latino Americans occurred at a
Walmart store in
El Paso, Texas when a white terrorist, Patrick Crusius, murdered 23 people and injured 23 others. Crusius was mostly
radicalized online, an increasingly common trend in the U.S. Shortly before the attack, he posted his "
manifesto" to the online message board
8chan, where he wrote about a "Latino invasion of Texas", claiming "white people were being
replaced by foreigners." He faces 90
federal charges, and he will receive the
death penalty if found guilty. ==2020s==