Joy Reid is criticized by Rep. Ritchie Torres for shaming pro-Trump Latino men, with Torres calling the approach "patronizing."
MSNBC host stated that Latino men will now have complete control over the well-being of mixed-status families and their female relatives.
Joy Reid was criticized by Rep. Ritchie Torres, D-N.Y., for mocking Latino men who voted for President-elect Trump in the recent election.
On Friday, Reid criticized various voting blocs, including White women and men of all ages, who did not vote for Vice President Kamala Harris.
According to the NBC News exit poll, 55% of Latino men voted for Trump.
"Latino men, despite the disrespect shown by Trump and his promise to deport some of your mixed-class, mixed-status families, most of them voted in a 55% majority to make the deportations happen. However, you all voted with Stephen Miller and David Duke and against your own sisters who chose Kamala Harris with 60% of their votes."
From now on, you will own everything that happens to your mixed-status families and your wives, sisters, and abuelas, as Reid informed Latino men.
The host of "ReidOut" was criticized by Torres, the first openly-gay Afro-Latino member of Congress, on social media.
On Monday night, Torres urged the liberal host to stop criticizing, blaming, and reprimanding working-class Latinos.
The lawmaker cautioned that a condescending, authoritative approach to progressivism would not win back working-class Latino men to the Democratic Party, but instead drive them away.
Despite Trump's landslide victory, which saw him win all seven battleground states and improve support among all voting blocs, including minorities, Harris supporters in the Democratic Party and the legacy media are still struggling to come to terms with the outcome.
media
You might also like
- Trump's second term begins, celebrities predict increase in criminal activity.
- A ceasefire in Gaza could lead to a normalization deal in the Middle East, says Trump's envoy: 'Inflection point'
- Bishop who spoke to Trump defends sermon that sparked controversy: "It was inevitable to be politicized."
- Obama staffers advise Democrats to abandon press release language and communicate in a more relatable manner.
- Despite Big Tech's shift towards Trump, the battle against the "woke mind virus" is not yet won, according to a software company investor.