Rockville, Md. – Juan Leo Salazar is on a mission to awaken a dormant political power in Maryland – the state’s conservative-leaning Latinos.
He has compiled a list of 28,000 names he believes he can galvanize for conservative causes. He says his organization of Maryland Latino Republicans has roughly 300 paying members.
He and many of his conservative friends have been working while keeping their heads down, he said. They’re not afraid of sharing their views now, he said, despite possible criticism and even retaliation.
Not anymore.
“Now that Trump is in,” Salazar said, “nobody’s afraid.”
The victory of Donald Trump has put wind in their sails. Salazar, a native of Peru, is happy to talk about the ways he believes Trump’s return to Washington will improve life for Latinos in Maryland, even Trump’s immigration plan.
Donald Trump’s 2024 election victory created shockwaves across the country. What’s more, exit poll data on Latino voters had some analysts’ heads spinning. Nationwide, 46% of this group voted for Trump.
But that turnout for Trump was not surprising for some Latino Republicans like Salazar. He and others had watched the ways people in their networks were responding to the Biden-Harris administration and saw the writing on the wall. Now, with a Republican trifecta at the federal level, they’re organizing to create momentum behind a Latino-Republican agenda in the state.
Salazar, who came to the area in the late 60s, has many thoughts on how Trump will benefit folks in Maryland.
To start, he praised Trump’s promise to cut taxes on tips and overtime as a win for the working-class Latino community.
“Now with the tips, no tax on tips. That is wonderful,” said Salazar, “you should see how the Latino community, Hispanics, are so happy about [that].”
He also thinks the Republican victory can help improve cultural issues conservatives care about at the state level. Connected with Latino Republicans across six counties in Maryland through his organization, Salazar has a good sense of how politically transformative the issue of parental input into school curricula is. He believes it unifies many minority immigrant groups in the state. This, he said, could change the state’s political map.
“If those [other] minority groups can get organized … with chapters in different counties,” he said, “I’m sure we can turn this state at least orange.”
But to strengthen the Republican hand in a state overwhelmingly run by Democrats, you need friends.
Alirio Martinez is one of Salazar’s friends on that mission.
Martinez, 50, lives in Easton, Md. with his wife Ann and their six cats. Outside of his entrepreneurial work – the two have an online business – Martinez enjoys connecting with fellow partisans.
The two men met this October outside of an early-voting polling precinct in eastern Montgomery County. Martinez was in the area and wanted to see if his buddy was canvassing. Salazar happened to have a table set up there, where he was doing outreach to the Latino community.
Martinez said there are a number of reasons why he’s hopeful that Trump’s return to Washington could help Latinos in the state.
“I tell people it’s about what’s going on, they’re hurting people’s pockets big time,” said Martinez. “They’re seeing the price of the eggs, the milk … the gas.”
Martinez, who went as a Republican delegate to the Republican National Convention in 2016, said he can remember the time under Trump when his favorite sandwich cost him $5 and when gas prices were more affordable. Things changed under Biden, he believes. “Everything,” he said, “started going up.”
International politics also plays a role. The two presidential candidates took different stances on the president of El Salvador, Nayib Bukele. Where Trump embraced the so-called “world’s coolest dictator,” Harris expressed concerns about a decline in the country’s democratic institutions under Bukele.
“Ohh, I love that [man],” said Martinez. “He’s my hero.”
Martinez said that many Salvadorans, who comprise the largest foreign-born population in Maryland, were disgruntled with what they perceived as Harris attacking a national hero. He said Bukele has done an amazing job of fighting crime in El Salvador.
Then, there’s the elephant in the room.
Prior to the elections, immigrant rights groups warned that Trump’s return to power would spell devastation for immigrant communities. But both Martinez and Salazar pointed to a greater number of deportations under President Obama than under Trump, in Trump’s defense.
“When he won in 2016,” said Martinez, “they were saying the same thing, exactly.”
Martinez said that there’s no way Donald Trump is going to undertake mass indiscriminate deportation.
He also said people should remember that Trump extended Temporary Protected Status to Salvadorans in 2019. Martinez, who perceives Democrats as more lenient towards illegal immigration, believes Harris was worse for immigrants in the state. Trump extended Temporary Protected Status after revoking it in 2018.
“There are bad and good people,” Martinez said.
He added that many Latinos in the state support tougher immigration. The vast majority who come to the U.S., he believes, are good and hardworking people. It’s the small percentage of undocumented individuals doing bad things in the country, he said, that makes Americans perceive all Latinos as criminals.
Salazar also said he believes Trump would not undergo mass indiscriminate deportations.
“He’s not going to do this,” said Salazar, “because if that happens, we will be here to say, ‘Hey, that’s not right.’”
Both men plan on attending Trump’s upcoming inauguration on Jan. 20, 2025. They both hope to meet the administration and lobby for what they believe is important for Latinos in the state, and they are embracing optimism.
“For the Latino community,” said Salazar, “there are a lot of good things that are happening.”
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