On Sunday, at a rally at Madison Sq. Backyard, in New York, Donald Trump and his supporters gave their closing argument. It started with offensive, identity-based jokes straight from the ’80s; continued with a shout-out to a Black man involving watermelon; and sooner or later implied that Kamala Harris, the vice chairman of america, was a intercourse employee. Alongside the way in which have been sprinklings of anti-Semitic, Islamophobic, and xenophobic feedback, together with this gem from the Trump adviser Stephen Miller: “America is for People and People solely.”
The vitriolic occasion included some alternative traces about Latinos from Tony Hinchcliffe, the comic chosen by the Trump marketing campaign to kick off the occasion. Hinchcliffe, who can be a podcaster, started with juvenile intercourse jokes about Latinos—“They love making infants”—earlier than shifting on to explain Puerto Rico as a “floating island of rubbish.”
As a Nuyorican—what New Yorkers from the Puerto Rican diaspora affectionately name ourselves—I’m keenly attuned to any point out of the island and my folks. And for many of this marketing campaign, little has been mentioned. So it was a shock to see that on the identical day that Hinchcliffe spoke at Madison Sq. Backyard, Vice President Harris launched a video outlining her plan for Puerto Rico and visited a Puerto Rican restaurant on the marketing campaign path in Philadelphia.
The coincidence was fortuitous, as a result of it supplied Puerto Ricans a real-time break up display. Many noticed Harris trying to be taught and handle the considerations of Puerto Ricans; Trump confirmed that he was prepared to welcome Latinos to his tent provided that they have been complicit along with his racist worldview. The language used on the Trump rally “was so easy, and it simply very genuinely confirmed how they actually really feel,” Paola Ramos, the creator of Defectors: The Rise of the Latino Far Proper and What It Means for America, instructed me.
After getting blowback for the “island of rubbish” comment, the Trump marketing campaign tried to distance itself. (As everybody is aware of, Harris is answerable for all the pieces anybody round her does, however Trump is harmless even of issues for which he’s been discovered responsible.) “This joke doesn’t mirror the views of President Trump,” a marketing campaign consultant mentioned.
As a lot because the marketing campaign might attempt to disavow Hinchcliffe’s joke, it could’t keep away from the way in which that that language merely bolstered the sense of disdain that Puerto Ricans had already skilled from Trump. The insult gave Democrats the proper alternative to remind Latino voters—and Puerto Ricans specifically—of one thing Harris raised in her video: Trump’s anemic, and insulting, response to islanders after Hurricane María, in 2017.
Hurricane Harvey had hit Texas a month earlier; there, FEMA had authorised $142 million in particular person help to hurricane victims inside 9 days. 9 days after María, FEMA had authorised simply $6.2 million for Puerto Ricans. In Texas, there have been much more helicopters, meals, water, authorities personnel. When then-President Trump did lastly go to the storm-ravaged island—almost two weeks after the hurricane had handed—he instructed residents they have been fortunate they hadn’t endured “an actual disaster, like Katrina,” and, in lieu of extra significant help, threw rolls of paper towels to the group at a media occasion.
This yr, Puerto Rican celebrities together with Marc Anthony have already been working to remind voters of all of this whereas campaigning for Harris. After Sunday’s rally, Ricky Martin and Jennifer Lopez shared Harris’s video and introduced that they have been voting for her. Lopez will seem with Harris tomorrow.
However none of those endorsements has as a lot significance as that of the musician Dangerous Bunny’s. His fan base is gigantic and younger, and contains each women and men. And in contrast to many stars who keep away from bringing politics to their platforms, San Benito, as he’s recognized to his followers, has made politics, and significantly the politics of colonialism, central to his artwork. He’s been lively as Puerto Rico has approached its election for governor, additionally occurring on November 5, buying billboards arguing {that a} vote for the ruling get together is a vote for corruption. His take has weight.
For months, as megawatt celebrities reminiscent of Taylor Swift and Beyoncé have thrown their assist behind Harris, I’ve heard folks asking the place Dangerous Bunny has been. Why hasn’t Dangerous Bunny been serving to Harris? The reply appeared apparent to me: Regardless of being a U.S. citizen and a worldwide celebrity, Dangerous Bunny can’t vote in presidential elections.
Dangerous Bunny is a resident of Puerto Rico, and disenfranchisement is simply one of many many inequities that outline islanders’ second-class citizenship. However even when Puerto Rican residents can’t vote, they’ll affect the diaspora on the mainland, which might. And that’s what Dangerous Bunny is doing.
After Trump’s rally, Dangerous Bunny shared a section of Harris’s Puerto Rico video along with his 45.7 million Instagram followers a number of occasions. Particularly, he chosen the section during which Harris says, “There’s a lot at stake on this election for Puerto Rican voters and for Puerto Rico,” and the place she reminds folks of Trump throwing paper towels to island residents after the hurricane.
Harris’s plan for Puerto Rico entails creating what she calls an “alternative financial system” on the island by shoring up the ability grid, offering clean-energy credit to islanders, and growing inexpensive housing, job-creation incentives, and funding in Puerto Rican entrepreneurs and creators, amongst a number of different main initiatives. Her plan noticeably evades the large colonial points, reminiscent of repealing the Jones Act—the 100-year-old tariff on produce and items shipped to the island that prices residents an estimated $692 million a yr. Nor does it handle taking on the Puerto Rico Self-Dedication Act—a invoice that Representatives Nydia Velázquez and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez have championed, which might permit islanders to vote on Puerto Rico’s standing as a commonwealth. Nevertheless, what Harris’s plan does supply are considerate options to most of the issues which have the island, particularly lately, which is greater than anybody can say of Trump.
The extra that the “floating rubbish” line is repeated—on tv, on the radio—the extra riled up Puerto Ricans are getting. Extra Puerto Ricans dwell on the mainland than on the island now. One results of the botched response to María has been, paradoxically, the migration of hundreds of islanders—many to swing states reminiscent of Pennsylvania, the place there at the moment are almost half 1,000,000 Puerto Rican residents. Tens of hundreds of Puerto Ricans presently reside in Georgia and Arizona as properly. The Democratic strategist José Parra instructed The Hill that what occurred at Madison Sq. Backyard may make an actual distinction: “If Pennsylvania swings towards the Democrats, I believe you possibly can look again on this as a pivotal second.”
A lot has been fabricated from the rising assist for Trump amongst Latinos, and this offense is unlikely to sway any of his true believers. However it might inspire some Latinos who’d deliberate on sitting the election out. Victor Martinez, who owns a neighborhood Spanish-language radio channel in Pennsylvania, instructed Politico that a big portion of the neighborhood there had been on the fence about voting in any respect. The Trump rally shifted that. “If we weren’t engaged earlier than, we’re all paying consideration now,” he mentioned.
Puerto Ricans love their island—even those that have by no means had the possibility to go there. Sure, it has gorgeous seashores, lush inexperienced mountains, the sound of the coqui. However what we love most is the heat of our tradition: the music, the dance, the meals, the artwork, our folks. It’s a place that calls to us once we’re distant and embraces us once we come residence. The joke was not simply an insult; it was a reminder of the neglect and disrespect the place and its folks have confronted for many years by the hands of america authorities, and particularly in the course of the Trump administration.
As soon as, when Dangerous Bunny was requested about his political engagement, he mentioned, “I’m not getting concerned in politics; politics will get into my life as a result of it impacts my nation, as a result of it impacts Puerto Rico.”