A new national poll commissioned by the Latino Community Foundation (LCF) and Voto Latino Foundation reveals that Latino voters are deeply concerned about the direction of the country under the Trump Administration—and are losing patience just 100 days into his second term.
Key Findings:
- Latino voters overwhelmingly report feelings of worry, fear, and anger as they reflect on the early months of the Trump Administration.
- Economic pain is top of mind. Inflation is the top concern, especially among younger Latinos and Latino men—groups that showed notable support for Trump in 2024.
- Most respondents believe Trump has made inflation worse, not better.
- While some 2024 Latino voters are still taking a "wait-and-see" approach, the data show signs of shifting tides. Trump’s approval rating now trails his 2024 vote share, and congressional Republicans are losing ground in the generic ballot.
“This poll makes one thing clear: Latino voters from 2024 are paying close attention and are not afraid to hold leaders accountable,” said Julián Castro, CEO of the Latino Community Foundation. “At LCF, we are listening closely to the voices of our communities, and what we’re hearing is deep concern about the cost of living and the lack of real solutions. Economic relief was promised, and our community is still waiting.”
"Latino voters are feeling the pressure every day — from rising prices to growing concerns about their safety," said María Teresa Kumar, Co-Founder and President of Voto Latino Foundation. "This poll captures a community that trusted promises of economic relief and stability, but instead sees a country moving in the wrong direction. Latino families aren’t just worried — they are mobilizing, staying informed, and ready to demand leaders who will deliver real change."
Click to download the results here.
According to Axios, about 36.2 million Latinos were eligible to vote in 2024 which was a 12% increase from 2020.
Methodology
The survey, conducted from April 10–14, 2025, polled 1,000 Hispanic voters who participated in the 2024 election. Using a mixed methodology of live phone interviews, text-to-web outreach, and online panels, the data reflects the voices of Latinos across age, region, and gender groups. The margin of error is +/- 3.1 percentage points at the 95% confidence level.