Monday, October 7

Latinos reject Project 2025, what is this Republican plan about?

Although they are relatively Few Latinos have heard of Project 2025once this government guide is explained to them, the majority rejects the proposal promoted by Republicans led by two former members of former President Donald Trump’s government.

Only 17% of Hispanics or Latinos have heard of Project 2025, also known as the 2025 Presidential Transition Project.

However, in letting Latino voters know more about that plan, their position is mainly against it.

“53% said Project 2025 represents a serious threat to American democracy by learning more about the initiative,” reveals a survey carried out by the My Code Intelligence Center for La Opinión.

Even 47% of Latino voters indicate that they would vote for politicians who supported policies and some legislation to protect US democracy from current and future political guidelines such as the 2025 Presidential Transition Project.

Those who most reject this project are people between 35 and 44 years old and the group between 55 and 65 years old, with 56%; unlike 49% of those between 18 and 34 years old.

The details regarding awareness of this Republican project indicate that it is “lowest among people aged 55 to 64, at 8%.”

He adds that it is people between 35 and 44 years old, with 22%, who have heard the most about said project; followed by 20 of those between 18 and 34 years old.

The 2025 Project is organized by The Heritage Foundation, an association that was influential in the recent Republican governments of Ronald Reagan and Donald Trump.

The strategy seeks to counteract liberal policies, which they consider “radical left.”

“If we want to rescue the country from the clutches of the radical left, we need both a government agenda and the right people,” the plan says. “This is the goal of the 2025 Presidential Transition Project. The project will be based on four pillars that, together, will pave the way for an effective conservative administration: a political agenda, personnel, training and a 180-day playbook.”

Paul Dans is the director of Project 2025. He previously served as Chief of Staff of the Office of Personnel Management in the Trump Administration.

While Spencer Chretien serves as associate director of this plan. He was a special assistant to President Trump and associate director of presidential personnel.

“The project is the effort of a broad coalition of conservative organizations that have come together to ensure that a successful administration begins in January 2025,” Project 2025 documents state.

The four objectives

Project 2025 has four objectives.

1. Restore to traditional family as a “centerpiece” of American life and protect our children, in reference to liberal policies, such as gender theory for respect for sexual diversity.

2. Dismantle the administrative state and an intention to “return” government to the people. The focus is on reducing government. “In the case of making the federal government smaller, more effective and accountable, the simple answer is the Constitution itself,” the project defends.

3. Defend the sovereignty and borders of “global threats”. Irregular immigration is marked as one of the “threats.”

4. Guarantee the “individual rights that God has given” and which mark the Constitution. “We don’t need to be told how to live,” the project indicates. “It is this inalienable right to self-direction – of each person’s opportunity to govern himself and his community toward good – that the ruling class disdains.”

Keep reading:
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• The Democratic Party has “ignored” Latino populations, acknowledges Christina Pascucci, who is competing in California for the Senate
• The Latino vote is essential in 2024 and “we will not take it for granted,” highlights Julie Chávez, Biden’s campaign manager