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Search resuls for: "Eduardo Sanchez"


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Republicans in this year’s US presidential election gained ground with Latino voters, a fast-growing electorate in which more than a million become old enough to vote each year. Many of those voters, dissatisfied with inflation’s eruption since the pandemic, voted for Trump in a rebuke to Biden. Trump’s policies likely won’t improve Latino livesAll eyes will be on the economy during Trump’s second administration. A majority of Latino voters don’t feel beholden to any party and prioritize issues over candidates, according to a report from the Latino Donor Collaborative. Ana Valdez, president of the Latino Donor Collaborative, said that Republicans made a greater investment in Latino voters this year, which included booking Spanish-language ads as well as pointing to high inflation.
Persons: Eduardo Sanchez, Donald Trump, Joe Biden, Biden, , ” Sanchez, years, Trump, Kamala Harris, Chandan Khanna, Mike Madrid, Nikki Garcia, ” Garcia, she’s, , Monica Garcia, Perez, Stringer, Garcia, There’s, Ana Valdez, Andrew Lichtenstein, ” Valdez, Carlos Odio Organizations: Washington CNN, CNN, Trump, Security, Democratic Party, AP, Getty, Republican, Central Florida, Fayetteville State University, Monday, Shipping, Social Security, Brookings, “ Employers, Republicans, Democratic Locations: San Francisco, Nicaragua, Nevada, Pennsylvania, Trump, Miami , Florida, Cuba, Central, Mexico, Canada, China, , Nanjing, China's Jiangsu, AFP, Puerto Rican, North Philadelphia
High blood pressure damages arteries and makes them less elastic, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Each participant said they did not have high blood pressure at the start of the study, and most said they were not smokers and consumed little or no alcohol. According to the analysis, 319 of the participants reported developing high blood pressure by the end of the eight years. People who experienced intermediate levels of workplace discrimination at the beginning of the study were 22% more likely than those who reported low levels of workplace discrimination to report high blood pressure after eight years. Compared with participants who experienced low workplace discrimination at the beginning of the study, people with high levels of workplace discrimination were 54% more likely to report high blood pressure after eight years.
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