Once again, the term “Latinx” is trending — and once again, it is all for the wrong reasons.
Like a modern-day Hydra, a term based on a Spanish gender-inclusive “x” with origins both in Latin America and the U.S. Latino community continues to be dissected and devalued only to return to the fore once again. All this scrutiny is piled on because it both challenges the status quo of Latino identity that some say started as a government invention and freaks out political operatives who have done very little to effectively outreach the country’s largest ethnic voting bloc.
Democrats would be wise to stop pushing the conversation to ban Latinx because, once again, they are playing right into a Republican trap.
The latest example, first reported by Politico on Monday, is a new poll of 800 U.S. Latino registered voters that stated the obvious. Just like other polls before it, it found Latinx is not a popular term — like “2 percent support” levels of unpopular. In addition, the poll from a Democratic polling firm noted that 30 percent of respondents would be less likely to support a political candidate who uses the term.
Even though the same poll concluded that a combined 64 percent said their support for a candidate would actually increase (15 percent) or not change at all (49 percent), the political conversation regarding the new findings is now all about how Democrats should stop using the term.
“To be clear my office is not allowed to use ‘Latinx’ in official communications,” Rep. Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz., tweeted Monday. “When Latino politicos use the term, it is largely to appease white rich progressives who think that is the term we use. It is a vicious circle of confirmation bias.”
To be clear my office is not allowed to use “Latinx” in official communications.
— Ruben Gallego (@RubenGallego) December 6, 2021
When Latino politicos use the term it is largely to appease white rich progressives who think that is the term we use. It is a vicious circle of confirmation bias. https://t.co/kMty6q7UQn
Democrats would be wise to stop pushing the conversation to ban Latinx because, once again, they are playing right into a Republican trap. Although not on the same level as the one baited with “critical race theory,” the Latinx debate has been politically weaponized ever since a 2019 opinion piece by future Trump campaign staffer Giancarlo Sopo lamented that “the last thing we need are progressives ‘wokesplaining’ how to speak Spanish.”
Soon after that piece was published, I interviewed Sopo for my radio show, and in the end, he didn’t deny the political motives behind his writing. Months later, Sopo began helping then-President Donald Trump’s campaign with Latino voter outreach, and it wasn’t a surprise that one of the campaign’s most effective pitches was that the socialist Democrats were now insulting patriotic Latino Americans with the use of Latinx.
It’s no wonder that Republican Virginia Attorney General-elect Jason Miyares, a Cuban American and the state’s first Latino elected to higher office, told Politico on Monday that using Latinx is a form of “cultural Marxism, a recast of societal norms.”
Of course, Republicans are smart enough to understand that if 30 percent of overall respondents in the new poll would not support a candidate who uses Latinx (and 43 percent of Latino Republican respondents), it aligns with the historical support Republicans have received from U.S. Latinos in national elections.








