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Latino voters have changed their views on abortion, research shows

AILSA CHANG, HOST:

I'm inside a Winnebago.

UNIDENTIFIED PERSON: OK, hold on. I'm going test the brakes, all right?

(SOUNDBITE OF OBJECTS BANGING)

CHANG: Those brakes work.

UNIDENTIFIED PERSON: Are you OK?

CHANG: I'm OK. Thank you.

All right, I'll explain why we're in an RV in a moment. But we're here in Arizona all week because this is a state that President Biden won by a sliver back in 2020, by just over 10,000 votes. And Arizona Latinos helped deliver that victory. They're a quarter of all eligible voters in this state. And that's the largest percentage of Latino voters in any battleground state.

MAYRA RODRIGUEZ: On your next light, that's when you're going to turn left.

CHANG: And that is why Mayra Rodriguez is going directly after this bloc of voters on the issue she cares the most about - abortion - even if it means enduring lousy air conditioning in this RV when it's 108 degrees outside.

RODRIGUEZ: You get sweaty. It is hot, right? And this is what I tell my children and any people that complain about this heat. If you don't like the heat, then imagine hell, right?

CHANG: Hell, to Rodriguez, would be seeing Prop 139 pass. That's a ballot measure that would expand access to abortion beyond the current 15 weeks here in Arizona and would enshrine it as a right under the state's Constitution, which brings us back to the Winnebago.

RODRIGUEZ: We cannot afford the big billboard and the big media. The other side can.

CHANG: And you figure, why do I need to buy a whole bunch of billboards if I have one movable billboard?

RODRIGUEZ: Exactly what we thought, right?

CHANG: This movable billboard is emblazoned with urgent warnings about abortion. But Rodriguez has an uphill battle because, according to Pew Research Center, 62% of Latinos believe abortion should be legal in all or most cases. But 20 years ago, only a third felt that way. So we wanted to know why is this shift happening? Why are Latino voters in this country changing their minds about abortion? To help us answer that question, we talked to four Latinas here in Arizona of different generations.

RODRIGUEZ: See, we can drive it around and if this is our best spot, then we'll park here.

CHANG: Mayra Rodriguez offers one explanation as we're lumbering along the streets of North Phoenix.

RODRIGUEZ: I think that 20 years ago, people were more religious, meaning that...

CHANG: You mean Latino people?

RODRIGUEZ: Latino people, you know, they were more active as Catholics. As you can see, the Catholic have really dropped. A lot of them...

CHANG: We're pulling into a parking lot outside a Hispanic grocery store, and Rodriguez starts passing out flyers to shoppers.

RODRIGUEZ: (Speaking Spanish).

CHANG: This election means so much to her. It's the first time Rodriguez will ever be voting in the U.S. She just became a citizen last year after arriving here from Mexico City 30 years ago. Back then, she supported abortion rights. She even got a job at Planned Parenthood. But, you know, after a decade and a half there, her opinion began to change.

RODRIGUEZ: It's very easy when you sell the idea of abortion and describe it when it's on paper and very different when you get to see the aftermath of the abortion or where you are in the abortion facility.

CHANG: You know, I can't help but realize as we're talking that you moved from maybe a more progressive place on abortion to a more conservative place, which is sort of the opposite direction than many Latino voters in the U.S.

RODRIGUEZ: Yeah, actually, my kid would agree with you. My son says, like, Mom, you're, like, swimming against the current because, you know, when I was on the abortion side, most of Hispanics were against abortion. And now, I'm on the pro-life side. A lot of Hispanics are going in the opposite direction.

CHANG: At this point, a woman driving by gives her the finger. Rodriguez barely flinches because she gets this a lot. She's been cut off on the road, harassed by drivers, shooed away from parking lots by police and store owners. And just last week, someone vandalized the RV door.

RODRIGUEZ: Because they tried to break in on it right here.

CHANG: But every now and then, Rodriguez does connect with someone, like Joe Hernandez (ph), who spots the RV in the parking lot and walks right up.

JOE HERNANDEZ: I'm not a woman, but you got to let it live. You can't stop, you know, what God does. You know, it's not right if you believe in God.

RAQUEL SALAS: I feel that the perception is that we don't have abortions because we live inside the Catholic church, and we just follow - whatever the priest says, we will do it. In general, the perception of Latinos is so wrong.

CHANG: This is Raquel Salas (ph). We met up with her and her daughter, Rebecca (ph), who was home from college for the weekend.

REBECCA SALAS: This is, like, clothes that I, like, washed here.

CHANG: You bring your laundry home...

REBECCA SALAS: Yes.

CHANG: ...Even though you're an hour-and-a-half drive away?

REBECCA SALAS: Yes.

CHANG: (Laughter).

The Salas family emigrated from Hermosillo, Mexico in 2011, when Rebecca was just 7 years old. And when she was growing up, the mere topic of abortion never came up. And Raquel says that was true for her, too, as a girl in Mexico. Abortion - it was taboo.

RAQUEL SALAS: It was not an option. So my mom got pregnant when she was 16. So she had me at 17. Back then, when girls got pregnant, they either came to the U.S. to get an abortion so nobody knew, or they would force them to get married.

CHANG: Because abortion was largely illegal throughout...

RAQUEL SALAS: It was illegal, and it was...

CHANG: ...Mexico until just last year.

RAQUEL SALAS: Yes. You don't talk about it. It's bad.

CHANG: But not talking about it? Well, all of that changed between Raquel and Rebecca on June 24, 2022, when the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. Rebecca was on a trip in Italy when she found out.

REBECCA SALAS: The first thing I did was call my mom. And I was like, what is going on? I don't understand. And, you know, we talked about it, but I was just - I was livid.

CHANG: When Rebecca got home, she and her mom joined a protest at the state Capitol, even though Raquel's views on abortion remain complicated.

RAQUEL SALAS: Still today, if you ask me, do you agree with abortion? - if I need to answer that question in one word, I would say no. But it's not a white-and-black thing. And the way I see it right now is you don't take the right away from everybody just because some people will use it as a contraceptive, which is what I'm really against. But I know there's many different shades.

CHANG: You don't feel that your personal beliefs should block access to abortions for other...

RAQUEL SALAS: Exactly.

CHANG: ...People.

RAQUEL SALAS: I should not take that right away from anyone.

CHANG: Now, both Raquel and Rebecca say they would never get an abortion themselves, but they both want to protect access for others. I asked them if they knew why more and more Latinos feel that way too.

RAQUEL SALAS: I'm guessing, but I know that after Trump's presidency, a lot of people got scared. Many of our rights were being endangered. And when they start limiting rights, they're affecting the most underserved population. You know, and if you did this to my neighbor, what's coming next?

(SOUNDBITE OF BIRD CHIRPING)

CHANG: Well, a few hours southeast of Phoenix, we meet someone who believes she knows all too well what's coming next.

MARGARITA ACOSTA: This place is very magical.

CHANG: We're in Cochise Stronghold, a remote canyon dotted with craggy, granite boulders. This place was named after an Apache leader who stood up to U.S. federal troops in the 19th century.

ACOSTA: I can feel very connected with nature, with the ancestors, with...

CHANG: Margarita Acosta was drawn to the energy of this land two decades ago.

ACOSTA: So when you start, you know, feeling like that, oh, you don't feel little anymore.

CHANG: Acosta has found peace here. She's only just started talking publicly about something that happened 40 years ago.

ACOSTA: When you realize you are pregnant, now what are you going to do? Who are you going to call? How are you going to do this?

CHANG: Acosta was 29 and living in Bogota when she found out she was pregnant, but abortion was illegal in Colombia at the time. You could spend years in prison just for getting caught inside a clinic. Still, she knew she did not want to have the baby. So she found a secret clinic and made an appointment.

ACOSTA: I remember, like, just a regular apartment complex. It was on the third floor, and there was no lift.

CHANG: No elevator.

ACOSTA: No elevator. And doctor said, like, did you come alone? I said, yeah. And he said, well, no anesthesia because you're going to have to walk outside yourself. I'm like, OK. OK. So he did his thing and then, you know, they gave me a pad. And he said, you know, if - you're going to bleed a lot. But if it's more than three days and it's a lot, and it's a lot of pain, go to the emergency room. Don't come here.

CHANG: Right.

ACOSTA: I'm like, OK. I remember going down the steps, just looking at the at the floor. And I had high heels on.

CHANG: Acosta says she actually considered herself lucky because she physically recovered and was able to emigrate to Arizona four years later.

Why do you think it took you 40 years to talk about it then?

ACOSTA: I don't - because it's so covered with shame. It's covered with shame and silence. Like, we don't talk about this.

CHANG: When you first came to the U.S., you knew it was legal, abortion. Roe v. Wade was the law of the land. Did you have the sense that, like, it would always be legal here? What did the U.S. feel like in that sense, compared to Colombia?

ACOSTA: Well, more freedom, of course, you know? Because once you have something like that banned, you set the opportunity for people to take advantage of that. When something is illegal, you have to go underground.

CHANG: Almost 40 years later, after you arrived here, the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. What went through your mind at that point?

ACOSTA: It was the same year that it was legalized in Colombia.

CHANG: Exactly. Two things going in opposite directions at the exact same time.

ACOSTA: Right.

CHANG: What did that feel like?

ACOSTA: Maybe we were not behind. Maybe we were ahead.

CHANG: You mean Colombia?

ACOSTA: Yeah. Maybe this country that they say that we're behind, maybe we're ahead because I know what's coming for you now. You have to pay attention.

CHANG: Pay attention, she says, to what can happen when a country curtails the right to choose.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

CHANG: The story of Colombia points to another reason we heard this week for the rising support of abortion rights among Latinos. They see laws changing in their home countries. The so-called green wave has expanded abortion access in Latin American countries like Argentina, Mexico, as well as Colombia. And now, three weeks from today, Latino voters will help decide the future of abortion rights right here in Arizona.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

CHANG: Tomorrow our series We, The Voters continues in Arizona, where we visit a Spanish language radio network committed to fighting election disinformation.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC) Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

Jonaki Mehta is a producer for All Things Considered. Before ATC, she worked at Neon Hum Media where she produced a documentary series and talk show. Prior to that, Mehta was a producer at Member station KPCC and director/associate producer at Marketplace Morning Report, where she helped shape the morning's business news.
William Troop
William Troop is a supervising editor at All Things Considered. He works closely with everyone on the ATC team to plan, produce and edit shows 7 days a week. During his 30+ years in public radio, he has worked at NPR, at member station WAMU in Washington, and at The World, the international news program produced at station GBH in Boston. Troop was born in Mexico, to Mexican and Nicaraguan parents. He spent most of his childhood in Italy, where he picked up a passion for soccer that he still nurtures today. He speaks Spanish and Italian fluently, and is always curious to learn just how interconnected we all are.
Ailsa Chang is an award-winning journalist who hosts All Things Considered along with Ari Shapiro, Audie Cornish, and Mary Louise Kelly. She landed in public radio after practicing law for a few years.