On Friday, while marking the one year anniversary of Donald Trump being elected president, MSNBC correspondent Jacob Soboroff traveled to Nevada hoping to find that Latino voters who backed Trump in 2016 had now abandoned him. However, much to his astonishment, he found that they remained steadfast in their support for the President.

“Two months before the 2016 election, I went on the Las Vegas radio show of Trump adviser Jesus Marquez....29% of Nevada’s Latino voters did vote for Trump. So last week I went back on Jesus’s show to see how things have changed since then,” Soboroff explained at the top of his report during the 10 a.m. ET hour.

Soboroff pressed Marquez: “What I want to know from you is, a year after Donald Trump was elected President of the United States, are you still happy with the way that you voted and the way that he’s doing?” Without hesitation, the radio host replied: “Yes, especially in the economy. The economy’s growing, we are growing now at 3.1%.”

Looking back to 2016, Soboroff confessed:

What surprised me most when I was here last time is that so many of your listeners called in, okay, and said to me, “It doesn’t matter that I’m Latino, it doesn’t matter that Donald Trump has insulted so many members of my race.” I want to know, a year later, since all of this, do people out there, do your listeners feel the same way?

It turned out that they did. Caller after caller defied the liberal reporter’s expectation of dwindling support for Trump. One man declared: “I feel way, way, way better with this president than before he was president. So I will vote for him again...” Soboroff desperately tried to lecture him: “As a Latino voter, nothing that Donald Trump has done, including, you know, ending DACA, going forward with building these wall prototypes – ” The caller cut him off:

Wait a minute, that’s a problem, that’s a problem. He didn’t end DACA. DACA was over by Barack Obama. He put the date when it was gonna have to be finished he didn’t renew it. That’s way different, brother.

Another gentleman called in to the show and emphatically stated: “I’m a Mexican-born man, I came here when I was 4. Enough is enough. Enough of the political correctness. Enough of everybody gets coddled. Enough of the establishment.”

Finally, a woman on phone not only doubled down on her vote for Trump but also blasted the liberal media:

I voted for Donald Trump, alright? And at this point in my life, I am not sorry because I did it. Actually, I am very proud of Donald Trump to be my president. I want to ask, why these people in the media, regular media, is always talking about corruption of Donald Trump with Russia. Excuse me, it’s all over the internet, it’s all over the cable channels, that the actual corruption with Russia was Hillary Clinton. So excuse me, that is collusion, that is a problem.

Exasperated by all the pro-Trump sentiment, Soboroff turned to Marquez and fretted: “What’s it going to take, Jesus, for people to change their mind that supported Donald Trump in 2016?”

Fill-in anchor Kristen Welker introduced Soboroff’s piece by telling viewers:

President Trump’s rhetoric on immigrants was expected to doom him on election day in 2016, especially with Latino voters, after demonizing Mexico and Mexican immigrants....And while Trump did not win Nevada, he did get 29% of the state’s Latino voters. Now Jacob is back in Nevada to see if those voters have any buyer’s remorse.

After the taped segment, she turned to her political panel and was baffled as to how Trump could still have any Latino supporters:

WELKER: I want to remind our viewers of how President Trump started his campaign. DONALD TRUMP [JUNE 16, 2015]: When Mexico sends its people, they’re not sending their best. They’re bringing drugs, they’re bringing crime, they’re rapists, and some, I assume, are good people. WELKER: Tim, when he first spoke those words, everyone said, “That’s it, he doesn’t have a shot.” You just heard one voter there in that conversation say, “I actually feel better about him now that he’s in office.” How do you square all of that?

Politico’s Tim Alberta observed: “Well, look, it’s a great reminder that the Latino community is not a monolith, electorally speaking.”

Welker again worried that Trump wasn’t being seen as anti-immigrant: “...one of the things that struck me is you heard that caller talking about DACA. He said, ‘Hey, wait a minute, the way that President Obama put it in place, it wasn’t meant to last.’ So that voter isn’t pointing the finger at President Trump.”

She then entertained the possibility that the media may be out of touch: “And yet, here in political circles, a lot of folks thought, ‘Oh, that’s going to cost him with Latino voters.’ Are we thinking about this in the wrong way?” The Washington Post’s Eugene Scott agreed: “I certainly think so....to look at people who backed Trump and to think that they voted primarily from a place of being concerned about how he spoke about demographics, it’s not why they supported him.”

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Here is a full transcript of the November 10 segment: