News

Workers at El Milagro Tortillería in Chicago Take On Bosses

Workers at El Milagro tortilleria in Chicago are in a fight with management over illegal labor practices, including the denial of paid sick days, immigration threats, and armed surveillance.

  • Oct 29, 2021
  • 11:59 AM

Report: Latinos Still Severely Underrepresented in Mainstream Media

While the headline may not surprise anyone, a new report commissioned by the Latino Donor Collaborative reveals just how absent Latinos are in TV, film, journalism, and other mainstream media.

  • Oct 28, 2021
  • 3:14 PM

The Autumn of President Bolsonaro

One of the few certainties Brazilians have these days is that, whenever possible, far-right president Jair Bolsonaro will make stupefying, anti-science, and borderline criminal statements. On Thursday, October 21, the President claimed that those who are vaccinated against COVID-19 could develop AIDS.

  • Oct 28, 2021
  • 12:13 PM

White House Announces $100 Billion Immigration Investment ‘Consistent With the Senate’s Reconciliation Rules’

“The framework includes a separate $100 billion investment in immigration reform that is consistent with the Senate’s reconciliation rules,” a White House fact sheet on the bill published Thursday morning said.

  • Oct 28, 2021
  • 10:42 AM

Senate Parliamentarian in Immigration Spotlight (Again)

Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-IL) is leading a third proposal to the Senate Parliamentarian for including immigrant relief in the Build Back Better Act (BBB), Joe Biden’s signature social spending bill. The third proposal (“Plan C”) will most likely be delivered to the Parliamentarian on Friday but could come as late as next week.

  • Oct 27, 2021
  • 4:17 PM

‘Ahora o Nunca’: Dual-National Players Center in U.S.-Mexico Fútbol Rivalry

Battles for players will be an essential component of the historic rivalry between Team USA and the Mexican national team over the next five years, and it’s also why fútbol in North America could embark on a historic run.

  • Oct 27, 2021
  • 2:37 PM

Puerto Rico Gov’t Passes Controversial PC1003 Debt Bill

On Tuesday, October 26, after the majority of protesters had left, the Senate approved PC1003. Gov. Pierluisi signed the debt restructuring bill into law almost immediately after it was passed, calling it “a great step forward to end the bankruptcy and get out from under the Fiscal Oversight and Management Board.”

  • Oct 27, 2021
  • 12:08 PM

From EL FARO ENGLISH: Bukele’s Party Cloned in Guatemala

José Luis Araneda Cintrón, a Guatemalan lawyer, began the process before Guatemala’s Supreme Electoral Tribunal to found a political party called “Nuevas Ideas,” the same name as that of President Nayib Bukele in El Salvador. The new party’s cyan logo is identical to that of the Salvadoran party.

  • Oct 26, 2021
  • 6:00 PM

Guatemalan Town Calm Under Martial Law After Mining Dispute

After protests against a mining project erupted into violence over the weekend, Guatemala’s government imposed martial law and a curfew in El Estor and filled the town of 20,000 residents with security forces.

  • Oct 26, 2021
  • 5:03 PM

Latino-Led Groups Launch First-Ever Bilingual Online Academy Against Gerrymandering

The Hispanic Federation and the Southern Coalition for Social Justice launched the Redistricting Academy, a first-of-its-kind bilingual resource center which aims to empower Latinos “to advocate for district maps that reflect the diversity of their population,” according to a press release.

  • Oct 26, 2021
  • 2:46 PM

Sen. Luján: Democrats Need to Invest More in Latino Vote

In July, Latino Rebels began asking members of Congress to explain the rightward shift in Latino voters during last year’s presidential election. Sen. Ben Ray Luján (D-NM) was the first Congressional Hispanic Caucus member asked.

  • Oct 25, 2021
  • 6:14 PM

Weeklong Immigrant Rights Protest Continues Outside Home of VP Harris

A small group of immigrant rights activists has been camped outside Vice President Kamala Harris’s house in Washington, D.C. since last Thursday, calling on Harris to overrule the Senate Parliamentarian and include immigrant relief in the budget bill being negotiated in Congress.

  • Oct 25, 2021
  • 1:26 PM

New Migrant Caravan Moves Through Mexican Blockade Heading Toward U.S.

More than 2,000 migrants left on Saturday from Tapachula, Chiapas in southern Mexico hoping to reach the U.S. border. Most of the migrants come from Central America and Haiti, including families with small children.

  • Oct 25, 2021
  • 10:42 AM

Poll: Biden Support Falls Among All Americans, Especially Independents and Latinos

While the pandemic has certainly hurt Biden’s support among Latinos, so has the economy. And Latino support for Biden on immigration is even lower.

  • Oct 22, 2021
  • 2:39 PM

A Closer Look at New York’s First Farmworkers Union

Unionizing offers pathways to securing many of the benefits long denied to agricultural workers, like paid time off and safer working conditions. But almost two years since they gained the right to collectively bargain, only 12 out of New York’s 58,000 farmworkers have joined a union.

  • Oct 22, 2021
  • 12:28 PM

From EL FARO ENGLISH: Does God Support Corrupt Leaders?

Central America, in Brief: Presidents and lawmakers in Guatemala and El Salvador have pivoted toward religious rhetoric and policymaking in response to increased public scrutiny. The Salvadoran legislature cited the Bible while striking down a partial decriminalization of abortion this week, following the footsteps of Ortega’s alliance with conservative Nicaraguan churches since returning to power in 2007. The phenomenon may also spread to Costa Rica, set to hold presidential elections in February.

  • Oct 21, 2021
  • 5:18 PM

Some House Latinos Voice Frustration as Immigration Reform Stalls in Senate

Five members of the House Hispanic Caucus, all Democrats, held a press conference on Wednesday to advocate for permanent immigrant relief provisions in the Democrats’ sprawling budget bill currently being negotiated on Capitol Hill.

  • Oct 20, 2021
  • 5:39 PM

Ex-Mexican Federal Officer Admits to Taking Bribes From Cartel

A former Mexican federal police commander, who served for years as a main point of contact for intelligence sharing between the United States and the Mexican federal police, admitted Tuesday that he accepted hundreds of thousands of dollars in bribes to help cartels ship cocaine into the United States.

  • Oct 20, 2021
  • 1:04 PM

Black Haitian Families Take on Department of Homeland Security, Activist Returns After Deportation

On Monday, Lawyers for Civil Rights (LCR) filed a complaint with the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties and the agency’s Inspector General, on behalf of a group of Black Haitians and their families who fled a dangerous situation in Haiti only to be submitted to inhumane treatment by federal officials at the U.S.-Mexico border.

  • Oct 19, 2021
  • 6:08 PM

In Cuba, Divisions Over Law to Allow Same-Sex Marriage

The socialist government recently published a draft Family Law and asked for public comment ahead of a referendum, creating an unusually public clash over policy on the island where Pentecostal churches have been growing.

  • Oct 19, 2021
  • 5:33 PM

AOC Raises $5.78 Million for Election Campaign War Chest

The two-term congresswoman representing parts of the Bronx and Queens has relied largely on small-dollar donors to raise money online, gaining an impressive $1,679,781 in the third quarter of this year, according to FEC fundraising disclosures.

  • Oct 19, 2021
  • 3:41 PM

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