Contemplate This from NPR : NPR

Raquel [R] and Rebeca Salas at their house in Phoenix, AZ, on Oct. 6, 2024.

Keren Carrión/NPR


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Keren Carrión/NPR


Raquel [R] and Rebeca Salas at their house in Phoenix, AZ, on Oct. 6, 2024.

Keren Carrión/NPR

In Arizona, President Biden received by a sliver again in 2020 –simply over ten thousand votes.

Arizona Latinos helped ship that victory. They are a quarter of all eligible voters on this state – and that is the biggest share of Latino voters in any battleground state.

This week, Contemplate This host Ailsa Chang’s reporting led her to an RV within the arid state. She joined Mayra Rodriguez on her mission of going immediately after this bloc of voters on the problem she cares essentially the most about – Abortion. Even when it means enduring awful air con within the RV when it is 108 levels exterior.

“You get sweaty, it’s scorching, proper? And that is what I inform my youngsters, and any people who complain about this warmth, if you happen to do not wish to warmth, then think about hell,” Rodriguez instructed Chang.

Hell, to Rodriguez, can be seeing Prop 139 go – that is a poll measure that might develop entry to abortion past the present 15 weeks right here in Arizona, and would enshrine it for granted beneath the state’s structure.

This movable billboard is emblazoned with pressing warnings about abortion.
However Rodriguez has an uphill battle right here. As a result of in accordance with Pew Analysis Middle, 62% of Latinos imagine abortion needs to be authorized in all or most instances. However it wasn’t all the time this manner.

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Altering values

20 years in the past, solely a 3rd of Latinos believed abortion needs to be authorized in all or most instances. At the moment, that quantity has risen to 62 p.c. So why are Latino voters on this nation altering their minds about abortion?

Contemplate This spoke with some Latina voters in Arizona to ask their ideas on why.

Raquel Salas and her daughter Rebeca, really feel that even addressing the subject was thought of taboo for a few years.

“I really feel that the notion is that we do not have abortions as a result of we reside contained in the Catholic Church and we simply comply with regardless of the priest says we are going to do. And once more, typically, the notion about Latinos is so fallacious,” stated Raquel.

The Salas household emigrated from Hermosillo, Mexico in 2011 – when Rebeca was simply 7 years outdated. And when she was rising up, the mere matter of abortion by no means got here up. Raquel says that was true for her too, as a lady in Mexico.

Raquel’s mom had her on the age of 17. “Again then, when ladies acquired pregnant, they both. got here to the U.S. to get an abortion so no one knew, or they’d power them to get married.”

All of that modified between Raquel and Rebeca on June twenty fourth, 2022, when the Supreme Courtroom overturned Roe v Wade. Rebeca was on a visit in Italy when she came upon:

“The very first thing I did was name my mother and I used to be like, ‘what’s going on? I do not perceive.’ And, we talked about it, however I used to be simply I used to be furious.”

A number of days later, Rebeca was again in Arizona, and determined to hitch a protest on the Capitol. And her mother insisted on becoming a member of her.

Each Raquel and Rebeca say they’d by no means get an abortion themselves. However they each need to defend entry for others.

“I do know that after Trump’s presidency, lots of people acquired scared. A lot of our rights have been being endangered. [AND] after they begin limiting rights, they’re affecting essentially the most underserved inhabitants. And if you happen to do that to my neighbor, what’s coming subsequent?” Raquel added.

Tradition from again house.

Margarita Acosta lives in Cochise Stronghold – a distant canyon dotted with craggy granite boulders. Shehas discovered peace right here, over one thing she simply began talking publicly about, that occurred 40 years in the past.

Acosta was 29 and residing in Bogota when she came upon she was pregnant. However abortion was unlawful in Colombia on the time – you might spend years in jail only for getting caught inside a clinic. Nonetheless, she knew she didn’t need to have the newborn. So, she discovered a secret clinic, and made an appointment.

“I keep in mind, like, only a common condominium complicated. It was on the third flooring, and there was no no raise.”

The physician instructed her to return alone, and that there can be no anesthesia since she’d should stroll herself exterior.

“So he did his factor after which they gave me a pad and he stated, ‘You are going to bleed so much, but when it is greater than three days and it is loads of ache, go to the emergency room. Do not come right here. Like, OK. I keep in mind taking place the steps, simply trying on the flooring, and I had excessive heels on.”

Acosta by no means spoke about it due to the disgrace she felt. And immigrating to the U.S. quickly after made her really feel a way of freedom she hadn’t skilled in Colombia.

The identical yr that Roe v. Wade was overturned, abortion grew to become authorized in her house nation.

“Possibly this nation that they are saying that we have been behind, possibly we have been forward,” she instructed Chang. “As a result of I do know what’s coming for you, now. You need to listen.”

This episode was produced by Noah Caldwell, Jonakhi Mehta, and Kathryn Fink. It was edited by William Troop. Our government producer is Sami Yenigun.

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