Liberal pundits have puzzled over increasing support for Trump by immigrants and people of color. To understand the trend, we should look to economic issues and the way institutions like unions and churches affect political socialization.
jacobin.com
I was not familiar with this publication until you posted some of their articles and I still have not delved into what exactly it is. It does not appear to be an academic publication, which is fine, but they do, I believe, need to support some of their claims. For instance:
"Numerous studies show that Latinos and Asians are less likely to identify with either the Democratic or Republican Party compared to white and black voters." They need to cite these specific studies so I can know how they were conducted, within what groups were these studies done, and what exactly are the numbers they are talking about. Without that information, it is hard for me to take their conclusions as other than just mere speculation.
Yes, they provide a lot of anecdotal evidence based on interacting with a specific immigrant group in Hawaii. I do not mean that their conclusions are all invalid. However, their conclusions also may be jumps based on minimal actual data.
For one, Hawaii, as they mention, is unique. Getting some goods to Hawaii is more difficult then other states. How does that factor into all of this?
Surely it is not a surprise that immigrants from this community who consume their news from Fox, Newsmax, etc. are more predisposed to support Trump? Also, surely it is not a surprise that immigrants who are deeply involved in evangelical churches are more likely to be conservative?
I get what this is saying or trying to say - there are more factors than just racism and sexism. OK, yes, but when a group is consuming media from places that clearly have the demonization of others as part of their rasion d'etre, how minimal is the racism and sexism? What about the churches these evangelical immigrants attend? Are they being bombarded from the pulpit and the pew with how evil certain politicians are? How anti-Christian some politicians are?
I do not think only racism and sexism were the reason for some of these votes. Obviously, economic concerns played a significant role. Maybe even the most significant.
Union members in this piece skewed Democratic. No surprise there either. But here's the thing if we are talking about going forward: conservatives have spent decades denigrating unions, equating them with communism, with a lack of freedom, with corruption, etc. Unions do not have the power they once had. In the south, they are basically non existent. Personally, I am very pro union. But how do we bring them back, make them stronger after so much denigration?
What realistic alternatives do we have to evangelical churches? I don't know.