Our faith is sacramental and communal. Love and good works, peace and charity, care and communion are nothing more than ideas if we do not actually embody them in some way. And just as learning a language requires patience and humility, we ought to foster a similar disposition as we walk in this faith and learn how to inhabit it together.
SAG-AFTRA has struck a new four-year deal with Telemundo Television Studios covering Spanish-language performers
Hispanic advocacy groups and others express confusion at the abrupt change and frustration with what some call the administration’s lack of efforts
Donald Trump entered the White House on Monday as the 47th president and immediately made good on his promise to issue a deluge of executive orders on everything from immigration to climate as he fired the starting pistol on his belated second administration.
Donald Trump has already put his stamp on the White House just a day after taking office as the 47th president. A Spanish-language version of the White House website has been suddenly shuttered, according to Newsweek. In addition, CBS News reported that a White House website containing information on reproductive rights has also gone offline.
White House removes the Spanish portion of the site; Trump previously said people in U.S. should "speak English." Could changes affect MS Hispanics?
The Washington Nationals today announced an agreement with Costa Media, extending the official Spanish-language radio broadcast partnership through the 2027 season. During the Nationals’ upcoming season,
Trump removed the Spanish version of the page in 2017. At that time, White House officials said they would reinstate it. President Joe Biden reinstated the page in 2021. According to 2023 Census Bureau estimates, about 43.4 million Americans — 13.7% of the U.S. population age 5 and older — speak Spanish at home. The U.S. has no official language.
A White House spokesman said the Spanish-language pages would soon be reinstated, though officials in Trump’s first administration reneged on a similar promise.
White House principal deputy press secretary Harrison Fields said that the administration is “committed to bringing back online the Spanish translation section of the website.”
The Spanish-language site was also removed in 2017 during U.S. President Donald Trump’s previous administration.