By Alejandro C.
If there is one thing I take away from the election of Donald Trump it is that a new and very large coalition of Americans are ready to embrace a vision of this country that aligns much more closely to nationalism that it does to the progressive dogma of the Democratic party.
Latinos across Texas, Florida, and the nation as a whole switched massively to Donald Trump. The former now future president won eradicated the Democratic lead among Latino men, turning it from +23 points for Biden in 2020 to +12 points for Trump in 2024.
Trump also took home more of the Latino female vote than any president before him. Biden won +39 points with Latinas in 2020 while Kamala was only up +22 points with Latinas this time around.
And lest anyone believe this surge in right-wing sentiment among Latinos is limited to social issues such as transgenderism or religion, I refer you to recent polling on the explicit support for mass deportations which was conducted earlier this year.
A surprising 53% of Hispanics in the United States support what CBS News and Yougov referred to as mass deportations in a June 2024 poll.
This is alongside 67% of White Americans and 47% of African Americans who also support so-called mass deportations of all illegal immigrants in this country. This was not the only poll that found a majority of Americans support the mass deportation of illegal aliens, as an April 2024 poll found a similar majority of Americans wanted to see all illegal aliens removed from the country as rapidly as possible.
People may be surprised by this, especially nationalists who might think that Hispanics in the United States would feel more ‘race loyalty’ to their fellow Hispanics than loyalty to the United States, but I do not think this result is all that far-fetched.
Many Latinos in the United States have deep roots in this country. The Hispanos of New Mexico, the Tejanos of Texas, and the Californios of California were all present in this country before their states were even admitted to the union.
In the case of the Californios and Tejanos their leaders played a very active and very patriotic role in the early political formation of their states and these places belong as much to them as they do to the White pioneers who came along and contributed to building these societies.
Research from the Pew Research Center has shown that, had the 1965 Immigration Act and other accompanying policies never been put in place, the non-Hispanic White population of America would only have fallen from roughly 84% the 1960s to about 75% today. Instead, modern America is only 54% White because of the radical changes brought by this legislation and decades of tolerance for illegal immigration.
White Papers’ own research on the prospect of repatriation has found that if the country were to deport illegal aliens, their children, and those immigrants suspect of having received their citizenship fraudulently, as well as steadily decreased the number of legal immigrants, the demographic mix of the country would be roughly 70% White, 10% Hispanic American 12% African American and roughly 8% Asian, Native American, and multiracial.
Almost all of these remaining Americans would have deep cultural and historic ties to the United States, and the core White population that established the cultural, political, and foundational ethics of the United States would retain a much stronger majority than it presently has.
Americans, of all stripes, clearly understand that radically altering the demographic character of the United States by way of mass immigration has negative consequences on everyone who loves this country, regardless of their race. Americans want America to remain recognizable to their ancestors and that means reversing the trends of mass immigration and demographic change that have been visited upon this country.
If Trump were to return to his first term policies, which reduced legal immigration by half, and truly enact a mass deportation of illegal immigrants, and their children present in this country, the US would be deporting more than 13.1 million non-citizen (mostly illegal) Latin Americans living in this country according to the Center for Immigration Studies, along with their 4.4 million children under the age of 18.
Were Trump to deport these 17.5 million people (as the American public so rousingly endorses across racial and partisan lines), the Trump administration could undo some twenty years of demographic change and set the stage for further immigration reforms that would not only stop but modestly reverse the transformation of this nation.
I welcome the Hispanic allies who want to preserve the United States for future generations and ensure this country remains recognizably American into the future. They came here for America, after all.
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What is most urgently needed across the Anglosphere is an an end to DIE and a return to freedom of association, including the right to schools which discriminate on the basis of whichever characeristics they choose. At present, for obvious rreasons, such schools are available for Jews, Muslims and no doubt Blacks but not for Whites.