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Democrats have long dreamed of flipping Texas from a bedrock Republican state to one that elects more Democrats to Congress and awards its mother lode of electoral votes to a Democratic presidential contender, something that hasn’t happened since 1976.

That dream has been buoyed by dramatic demographic changes in Texas, where the population has grown at more than twice the national average for the last 20 years, and people of Latin American descent account for 60% of that growth.

But Democrats have a problem. Latino voters, regarded as a key Democratic Party constituency, are showing a greater willingness to vote Republican, even in Texas’ southernmost counties along the border with Mexico.

In 2016, then-Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump received less than 28% of the vote in Hidalgo County, the most populous of Texas’ border counties, and one in which Latinos account for 93% of the population. In his 2020 reelection bid, Trump scored almost 41% of the vote.

Last year, Hidalgo County’s largest city, McAllen, elected its first Republican mayor in 24 years.

Such results may serve as a warning sign for Democrats ahead of November’s midterm elections that will determine control of Congress for President Joe Biden’s final two years of his current term.

Texas has long been critical territory for the Republican Party. The state sends the country’s largest Republican delegation to the House of Representatives and hasn’t elected a Democrat to statewide office since 1994.

‘Exciting time to be a Republican’

But Democrats have historically dominated at the ballot box in the land between San Antonio and the Mexican border — a vast, sunny scrubland where Spanish-speaking cowboys founded the first Texas cattle ranches a century before English-speaking settlers arrived.

Political observers predicted for years that Latino population growth in other parts of the state would boost support for Democrats in Texas. But for the most part, it hasn’t happened. In fact, while South Texas still leans toward the Democrats, Republicans are making inroads.

“It’s an exciting time to be a Republican,” said Adrienne Peña-Garza, the Republican Party chairperson for Hidalgo County. “The new generation is much more bold than I was.”

Peña-Garza is the first Latina to head the Republican Party in Hidalgo County. She told VOA she has critics who maintain that a woman — especially a Hispanic one —shouldn’t be a Republican. Yet, she says she has seen many Latina and Latino Republicans enter the political arena and is encouraged to see the party grow in her area.

Hildalgo County remains Democratic

Texas Democrats insist that they are not sitting idly by. Manuel Medina, state chairman for Tejano Democrats, the Latino wing of the Texas Democratic Party, said Democrats picked four Latina women to run for reliably Democratic seats in the Texas State House in Tuesday’s primary elections. He said he was glad to see more Hispanic involvement in the Republican Party, as well.

“That more doors are open for people to participate in the political system is a good thing. In general, it’s positive,” Medina said. “Hispanic women will lead.”

But he cautioned against reading too much into recent voting trends in Texas, pointing out that Democratic primary voters in Hidalgo County still outnumbered Republicans more than two-to-one on Tuesday. Despite Republican gains, the area remains largely Democratic.

Even so, Peña-Garza is optimistic about the Republican Party’s future in South Texas. She credited Trump for Republicans’ growing popularity in the region and noted that a stream of high-profile Republicans has visited Hidalgo County, including Trump’s son, Donald Trump Jr., who drew 700 people to a local auditorium at 8 a.m. last year.

“It makes us feel included in state and national politics,” Peña-Garza said. “We have been voting Democrat for over 100 years. Has that helped us?”

Jason Villalba, chairman of the nonpartisan Texas Hispanic Policy Foundation, told VOA that a variety of issues have boosted Republicans’ fortunes in South Texas, including perceptions that Democrats are critical of law enforcement and want to restrict the fossil fuel industry — two major employment sectors in South Texas.

Villalba also contends that Trump’s “strongman” image played well among some Latino voters.

Villalba noted that until recently, turnout was often low among Hispanic voters.

“We were not able to be impactful,” he said.

Latino political clout growing

That is no longer true, as Latinos have grown in numbers and clout and are increasingly engaged in the political sphere. But they don’t vote as a bloc. Texas Hispanics include 2.5 million immigrants from Mexico, nearly 500,000 from Central America and 170,000 from South America — all of whom came with distinct viewpoints that influence the political leanings of their voting-eligible children.

According to Hector de Leon, a longtime political organizer and blogger in Houston, expectations for a wave of Democratic support amid the Texas population boom were based in part on incorrect assumptions from the national party that nonwhite voters would naturally vote Democrat.

“They just assume every person who is a person of color is going to behave the same electorally, and they got that completely wrong,” de Leon said. “That is continually driving their methods, and that’s why they may be losing more Hispanic voters.”

Those assumptions led to speculation as early as 2016 that perhaps Hillary Clinton, the Democratic presidential nominee that year, could carry Texas. She lost the state to Trump by nine percentage points.

Looking ahead, a redrawing of Texas’ congressional districts based on the 2020 U.S. Census may give Democrats little to cheer in this year’s midterm elections.

“You don’t see progress being made by Democrats up and down the ballot,” said Jim Henson, director of the Texas Political Project at the University of Texas at Austin. “The idea that Texas is turning blue (Democratic) has been abandoned by most people, given the results.”

There are already three communities and one autonomous city that have left the area of ​​extreme risk of coronavirus transmission (less than 500 cases per 100,000): Andalusia, Castilla-La Mancha, Community of Madrid and Melilla. The Ministry of Health has reported 301 more deaths and 33,911 infections since yesterday.

Three Autonomous Communities and Melilla come out of the extreme risk of transmission and 301 more deaths are reported


Terraces in Valencia. EFE/Biel Aliño

The 14-day cumulative incidence has dropped 58.5 points since Tuesday to 676 cases per 100,000 inhabitants on average, still an extreme risk of transmission in the whole of Spain.

The community with the highest accumulated incidence and the only one that exceeds a thousand infections is Galicia (1,126), while Andalusia (390), Castilla-La Mancha (433) and Madrid (476) are below 500 cases, high risk of transmission.

By age bracketsthe incidence was low in all groups, with 12 to 19 year-olds leading the way with 1,030 cases, followed by 20 to 29 with 820 and under 11 with 775 cases.

Deaths: 301 deaths

One more day the Ministry of Health has notified a high number of deaths, 301, after yesterday there were 173 and 464 last Monday, although there may be delays in notifications by the autonomous communities.

The death toll during the sixth wave, which began just over four months ago, amounts to 12,019.

The total number of deaths since records are available in this pandemic is 98,936.

The infections: 33,911

Health It has reported 33,911 infections since yesterday, a figure somewhat higher than that of Tuesday, 22,194, although far from the more than 300,000 that were reached after a weekend at the peak of the sixth wave.

Since the start of the pandemic in Spain, there are already 10,914,105 confirmed cases of coronavirus.

The positivity rate of diagnostic tests it continues to fall to 20.35%, four tenths less than yesterday.

Hospital occupancy continues to decline

The ICUs are at 12.52% bed occupancy with 1,162 patients, 23 less since yesterday although still at high risk (between 10 and 5%).

All the autonomous communities are below the extreme risk of occupation (25%). Catalonia and Aragon have 22% occupancy, while Galicia stands at 3.2%, in a new normality.

In Spanish hospitals, on the ward and ICU, there are 8,258 covid patients (6.6% occupancy), 601 fewer patients than last Friday and in a situation of medium risk (from 5% to 10% of occupied beds).

In the last 24 hours, 732 people have been admitted due to covid and 1,253 have been discharged.

Vaccines

In total there are 38,398,979 citizens, 91% of the population over 12 years of age, with the full schedule of the covid vaccine.

In addition, 23.9 million people have already received the booster dose, 50.5% of the general population.

57% of children aged 5 to 11 years (1.8 million out of 3.2 million) have received at least one dose and 15.8% already have the complete schedule since the campaign started on December 15 pediatric vaccination.

The White House on Friday launched a beta version of a tool that will be used to determine where to invest billions of federal dollars to bring clean energy and infrastructure to disadvantaged communities, a key step in fulfilling a promise by the Biden administration to prioritize environmental justice.

The Council on Environmental Quality unveiled the Climate and Economic Justice Screening Tool, used to map and identify communities that are most in need of investment by weighing income levels and over two dozen socioeconomic, health and environmental indicators.

The software has been under development since early last year with input from the White House environmental justice advisory council as a key input for President Joe Biden’s “Justice40 Initiative,” a goal he set early in his presidency to ensure that 40% of the benefits of federal investments in clean energy get channeled to communities that are overburdened by pollution.

“The Climate and Economic Justice Screening Tool will help federal agencies ensure that the benefits of the nation’s climate, clean energy, and environmental programs are finally reaching the communities that have been left out and left behind for far too long,” CEQ Chair Brenda Mallory said.

Using census tract data, the web-based program identifies communities as being disadvantaged if they are above the 65th percentile for income and above the 90th percentile for any of 25 indicators ranging from local asthma rates to traffic and hazardous waste site proximity to unemployment.

But an indicator that is conspicuously absent is race. A Biden administration official told reporters that the tool was designed to be “race neutral” to be able to withstand potential legal challenges.

The omission has disappointed some environmental justice advocates.

Sacoby Wilson, a professor at the University of Maryland School of Public Health who helped developed a state-level screening tool for Maryland, said the decision not to use race as an indicator is political.

“The science is clear. Race is the biggest predictor of environmental hazard,” he told Reuters.

“We are missing an opportunity by excluding race in the tool,” said Anthony Rogers-Wright, director of environmental justice at New York Lawyers for the Public Interest. “The tool is not telling the full story of a community.”

The Environmental Protection Agency also on Friday launched a revamp of its own screening tool, EJSCREEN, which can be used to guide environmental rulemaking.

The CEQ will take public comment on the tool for 60 days.

Two freelance journalists have been awarded the 2022 American Mosaic Journalism Prize for their work reporting on underrepresented or misrepresented groups in the United States, it was announced Wednesday.

Julian Brave NoiseCat and Ryan Christopher Jones were each awarded $100,000 by the Heising-Simons Foundation based in Los Altos, California.

NoiseCat is a member of the Canada-based Canim Lake Band of First Nations people, and practices journalism in the U.S. Pacific Northwest, the foundation said.

His articles and podcasts have covered issues such as fatherhood from the perspective of Indigenous men and a movement by homeless Black mothers to reclaim a vacant house they were evicted from in West Oakland, California, the foundation said.

His work has appeared in major publications including the New York Times, the Washington Post, The New Yorker and National Geographic.

“Indigenous communities have a perspective and an experience that matters to a broader audience,” NoiseCat said in a foundation news release.

“My work is inspired by a belief that indigenous peoples’ experience and wisdom can contribute to understanding and addressing the world’s most pressing challenges — from the climate crisis to anxieties around imperialism and race.”

Jones is a Mexican American photojournalist and anthropologist. His work has examined the lives of immigrants in California, New York and elsewhere, farmworker communities in central California and issues such as the drug overdose crisis and Mexican American economic mobility, the foundation said.

His work has appeared in outlets including the New York Times, the Atlantic, ProPublica and the Guardian newspaper in the United Kingdom.

“In the news, photographic depictions of vulnerable communities have often resorted to dangerous tropes and stereotypes,” Jones said in the foundation release. “As a photojournalist it has been my goal to visually document the complex stories of these underrepresented communities with the care and nuance they deserve.”

The prize was awarded for long-form, narrative or deep reporting by a panel of 10 judges that included journalists from major news outlets.

All the autonomous communities, except the Basque Country, which has abstained, have endorsed the end of the mandatory nature of the mask outdoors from next Thursday. The exception is in mass events, including sports.

All the Autonomous Communities, with the Basque Country abstaining, support the end of the mask on the street

The Minister of Health, Carolina Darias (c), chairs the meeting of the Interterritorial Council of the National Health System held this Monday at the Ministry of Health. EFE/ Ministry of Health

The Interterritorial Council of the National Health System, made up of the Ministry of Health and the counselors of the autonomous communities, met this morning to give the green light for the end of the mask on the street, although it will continue to be recommended to use it if there are crowds.

Massive events, including sporting events, when standing or when the interpersonal distance of 1.5 meters cannot be kept if seated are excepted.

This measure will be definitively approved tomorrow by the Council of Ministers so that, after the publication of the decree law in the Official State Gazette on Wednesday, it enters into force next Thursday.

The mask in the street became mandatory again when the sixth wave rose strongly with the arrival of omicron and just as the Christmas holidays began. On Christmas Eve the mask returned to the outside, although many people continued to use it.

sixth wave
Several people with masks walk down the street. EFE/Brais Lorenzo

Capacity increases at sporting events

In this same meeting, the Interterritorial Council has increased the capacity in sporting events, which goes from 75% to 85% in open venues and from 50% to 75% if they are closed; These figures will be reviewed before the end of February when, some of the sources consulted point out, the entire public can resume.

Some communities, such as Madrid and Andalusia, have abstained on this point because they rejected that there were still capacity limitations.

On the other hand, at this morning’s meeting, the Minister of Health, Carolina Darias, has informed the directors of the last advances digital covid certificate within the European Commission.

In this way, the Ministry of Health has reported that a proposal to modify the regulation has been published so that these certificates can be issued to people who participate in clinical trials of vaccines against covid (as is the case of the Spanish Hipra) and that the documents can be accepted by other member states so as not to apply restrictions to free movement.

In this sense, Spain has proposed the issuance of digital recovery certificates based on antigen tests and not only on PCR tests as up to now, although these advances, says Health, must follow their regulatory course to be consolidated.

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