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Tag: 2024 Election

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  • Cesar Chavez Foundation > 2024 Election
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Chavez Media’s Radio Campesina Combats Election Misinformation in the Latino Community

October 31, 2024, by CCF

Source: Caitlin O’Hara/for NPR

In 1983, Cesar Chavez founded Radio Campesina to inform, entertain, and inspire Latino communities and working families, laying the foundation for what is now known as Chavez Media.

Major outlets like the Associated Press and NPR have recognized Chavez Media for its work combating election misinformation and mobilizing voters through Radio Campesina, a station serving the Latino community, and this election season, Radio Campesina aimed to address voting misinformation and promote civic engagement.

We spoke with Maria Barquinn about how Chavez Media embodies Cesar Chavez’s legacy by advocating for social justice and empowering Latino communities through authentic, community-centered content and the importance of being informed and engaged during the 2024 election.

1. How does Cesar Chavez’s legacy impact and guide the work of Chavez Media and its programs?

By serving as the foundation of its mission and values. His dedication to social justice, the empowerment of farmworkers, and the advocacy for Latino communities is at the heart of Chavez Media’s approach. This media organization aims to uplift and support underserved communities by providing a platform for Latino voices, promoting education, and fostering community engagement through culturally relevant content.

Chavez Media channels Cesar’s dignity, equality, and collective action principles into its programming and services, ensuring that its media, radio, and digital platforms advocate for fairness, worker’s rights, and social progress. By focusing on issues that resonate with the Latino community—like immigration, labor rights, and access to resources—Chavez Media keeps the spirit of Cesar Chavez alive, working to inspire change and empower future generations through media and communication.

2. How does Chavez Media build trust with the Latino community in an era of widespread misinformation?

We build trust with the Latino community by adhering to authenticity, transparency, and community-centered content creation principles.

We focus on creating content and fulfilling needs that resonate with the lived experiences of the Latino community. By focusing on the areas that have the most significant impact on the day-to-day lives of today’s Latinos, we ensure that how we do so is relatable and trustworthy. This relevance creates a strong connection with the audience, fostering trust. We also foster close ties with the communities we serve by actively engaging in local events and responding to and highlighting stories that matter most to the people. This grassroots approach helps the community feel seen, heard, and respected.

We deliver our messages through well-known, trusted voices from the Latino community—radio hosts, influencers, and leaders who have built credibility over time. These figures, who are often long-time advocates for the community, help strengthen the bond between the audience and our platforms.

In an era of misinformation, Chavez Media prioritizes fact-based reporting and clear messaging. We hold ourselves to a standard that, as members of the general public, we would hold any other media outlet to. We strive to provide accurate, vetted information and encourage media literacy within our audiences, equipping them with the know-how on how to distinguish between trustworthy and misleading sources. Also, by collaborating with non-profits, advocacy groups, and trusted local organizations that have a long-standing relationship with the community, Chavez Media reinforces its commitment to the public good, further enhancing our credibility.

Through these efforts, Chavez Media stands out as a reliable source of information, entertainment, and advocacy for the Latino community, positioning itself as a pillar of trust amidst the noise of misinformation.

3. What advice do you give your audience when it comes to the 2024 election?

As we approach the 2024 election, it’s more important than ever for our community to be informed and proactive. Our advice is to take the time to thoroughly understand the candidates and their policies, focusing on how they directly affect you and your loved ones. Use trustworthy sources to verify any information, especially given the prevalence of misinformation.

It’s also crucial to ensure that you know the important deadlines to vote and that your registration is up to date. Each state has different rules, so knowing your voting options—whether voting in person, by mail, or early—is key to making sure your voice is heard. Once you’re prepared, encourage your family and friends to do the same, engaging them in discussions about the importance of voting and what’s at stake in this election.

Beyond casting your vote, remember that this election shapes the long-term future of our communities. Issues like immigration, healthcare, and women’s freedoms are on the line, so it’s vital to vote for candidates who will fight for what matters most to us. And after election day, stay engaged. Our involvement doesn’t stop at the polls; it continues by holding leaders accountable and advocating for the change we want to see. Your vote is your voice, and together, we can make a real difference in 2024.

Dive into the captivating world of Radio Campesina, featured in the acclaimed PBS documentary series VOCES. Click the link below to join the journey! To learn more about Chavez Media and its mission to create products and services that uplift the stories and voices of the communities it serves, visit chavezmedia.com

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Cesar Chavez began his activism 72 years ago by mobilizing Latino voters. Let’s do it again!

August 22, 2024, by CCF

The Legacy of Cesar Chavez in Activism

Before he organized farm workers, Cesar Chavez’s activism began by registering and turning out poor Latinos to vote. He also fought Republican voter suppression tactics as early as 1952 in the impoverished Eastside San Jose barrio called Sal Si Puedes(Get Out If You Can).

Think about it. Why did President Biden have Cesar Chavez’s bronze bust placed in the Oval Office on the first day he entered it as president—27 years after Cesar’s passing? Why did 17 million Americans support his boycott of California table grapes in 1975? Was it partly because the genesis of Cesar’s activism was community organizing and voter engagement? He was a civil rights leader before becoming a farm labor leader.

Cesar Chavez’s organizing career started at age 25, when he met Fred Ross Sr., one of America’s greatest community organizers.

Cesar Chavez and Fred Ross Sr.
(Bob Fitch)

“The first time I met Fred Ross, he was about the last person I wanted to see,” Cesar recalled when eulogizing his mentor and teacher in 1992. Ross arrived in the rough East San Jose barrio in the spring of 1952, organizing a local chapter of the Community Service Organization after forming the original chapter in East Los Angeles. Cesar had recently left field work. He initially believed Ross was one of the college professors who came down from Berkeley or Stanford while studying Mexicans and asking them rude questions. Once Ross started talking, he quickly realized that wasn’t the case. He spoke about empowerment through the ballot box—and Cesar’s life was forever changed. Ross wrote that night in his diary, “I think I’ve found the guy I’m looking for.”

Over more than a month of frantic days and nights, Cesar helped CSO register 4,000 new voters. When Election Day arrived, the local Republican Party dispatched “challengers” to threaten Latinos voting for the first time. It was reminiscent of voter suppression still taking place in too many places when people of color cast ballots. The tactic failed. One Latino voter exclaimed, “At first, I got really mad, but then thought if they go to all that trouble to keep us from voting, it means they are paying attention to us.”

The Impact and Importance of Mobilizing Latino Voters

So many Latinos turned out to vote that county authorities got packinghouses to stop dumping waste into barrio creeks. And they fixed cesspools that had been producing amoebic dysentery.

After that successful drive, Ross saw to it that Cesar was put on as a full-time CSO organizer. Together, the two men established 22 CSO chapters across California and in Arizona. More than 500,000 voters were registered.

Cesar Chavez mobilized the Latino vote while working with CSO in Oxnard in the fall of 1958.

Some 50,000 residents become U.S. citizens. This organizing produced indigenous leaders such as Edward Roybal, Herman Gallegos, and Cruz Reynoso, among many others. CSO attracted broad support by addressing the concerns expressed by the people who were being organized. It confronted voter suppression, battled police brutality, and opposed employment discrimination and school segregation. The diverse coalition it assembled included Latinos, African Americans, Jews, Catholics, Japanese Americans, and union leaders.

CSO registered 160,000 Latino voters and turned them out to the polls for John F. Kennedy’s 1960 race for president. Cesar won praise from Robert F. Kennedy, who met with him and would later play a key role in the farm worker movement.

Mobilizing for Today and Tomorrow

“You can’t do anything by talking,” Cesar explained. “You can’t do anything if you haven’t got the power…And the only way you can generate power is by doing a lot of work.”

This year, let’s do a lot more work by making sure everyone is registered to vote—and votes. How better to honor Cesar Chavez than by doing what he did? As he once said, “We don’t need perfect political systems; we need perfect participation.”

Let your voice be heard! Visit vote.org now to find your polling center and get all the info you need for your state’s election. Together, we can create a powerful impact on the future of our nation.

Press Inquiries:

Suzy Silvestre

Director of Strategic Communications

ssilvestre@chavezfoundation.org

 

Marc Grossman

Spokesperson

mgrossman@chavezfoundation.org

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