Spain’s foreign minister spoke out against Trump administration’s decision to remove Spanish-language content in a country of 57 million Hispanic people

This article is more than 3 years old

This article is more than 3 years old

Spain has expressed concern over the disappearance of the US White House’s Spanish-language website since Donald Trump came to power, saying it was “not a good idea” in a country with millions of Hispanics.

White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer said on Monday that the website was being updated.

“We are continuing to build out the website both in the issue areas and in that area,” he told reporters in response to a question over when the Spanish version of the site would be running again.





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Earlier, Spanish Foreign Minister Alfonso Dastis had expressed concern over the sudden disappearance of the website.

“We regret that the Spanish version of the website was deleted, it doesn’t seem like a good idea,” he said.

“We believe it is not a good idea to give up on such a communication tool, given that this is a country with 52 million Spanish speakers.”

According to the US Census Bureau, the Hispanic population has actually now reached close to 57 million – the largest minority living in the 320-million-strong country.

Many are from Latin America, and about 13 million are thought to have voted in the November election – a majority for Trump’s Democratic party rival, Hillary Clinton.

Spain’s government spokesman, Iñigo Méndez de Vigo, said: “The knowledge and use of different languages in society contributes to propping up a country and demonstrates the cultural wealth of a nation.”

In a statement, he added that Spanish had “helped bring together the multicultural North American society for centuries”.

But he said the website’s sudden disappearance would “not stop or put at risk the unstoppable spread of our language in the United States and in the entire world”.

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Trump has offended many Latinos with his harsh rhetoric and tough stance on immigration.

Part of his electoral platform included proposals widely considered anti-Latino.

These included proposing to deport millions of undocumented migrants in the country, the bulk of whom are from Latin America, and building a wall on the US border with Mexico.

In September 2015 while still competing for the Republican party’s presidential nomination, Trump famously told his Spanish-speaking rival Jeb Bush “he should really set the example by speaking English while in the United States”, in an interview with the conservative website Breitbart News.

Bush broke into Spanish on several occasions on the campaign trail. And for the first time since 1989, Trump’s cabinet will feature no Hispanic people.