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Washington’s Latino Fest canceled for 2025
Kalen McCain
Apr. 28, 2025 1:48 pm, Updated: Apr. 28, 2025 2:08 pm
Southeast Iowa Union offers audio versions of articles using Instaread. Some words may be mispronounced.
WASHINGTON — Organizers say they won’t hold Washington’s Latino Festival this summer, canceling plans for a popular day-long annual tradition in the city’s central park marked by an abundance of authentic food, flashy lucha libre matches, plus musical mariachi and “Banda” performances.
A press release about the cancellation cited non-specific “current circumstances.” But in an interview late last week, Latinos for Washington President and Cofounder Sonia Leyva said the decision was driven by safety concerns, citing a nationwide arrests and deportations by federal immigration officials since President Donald Trump took office.
“We need to take care of our community members, and it’s almost like we don’t want to do anything that brings so much attention, and brings people there for the wrong reasons,” she said, adding that she was disappointed because, “it’s a family-oriented event, we’ve had it every summer for the last 10 years, people look forward to it … it’s supposed to be something happy, and it’s turned into something that’s just scary. We don’t want to put anyone in danger.”
While the national monthly rate of arrests in January was considerably lower than in the final year of the Biden administration according to Reuters and NBC, the current president has moved to make the process faster for immigrants without criminal records.
The Trump administration says it has arrested and deported tens of thousands of people since he took office in January, adding that roughly half of those deported had criminal records. But attorneys for many of the displaced say the process happened without sufficient legal notice, and sometimes skipped court hearings, ignored judges’ orders or displaced legal U.S. residents, according to coverage in national outlets including Reuters, PBS, and Fox News.
Other organizations have made similar calls across the nation for their own events celebrating Latino culture. Chicago’s annual Cinco De Mayo parade recently announced its cancellation, as has Philadelphia’s Carnaval de Puebla, with spokespeople sighting the same concerns about federal raids.
Leyva called Latinos for Washington’s move a “tough decision,” but said many community members feared a threat of wrongful arrests and deportations, as reports surface of deportations for U.S. citizens, including father from Maryland, a man shipped to an El Salvador prison in what government lawyers called “an administrative error,” and children whose parents were ordered out of the country.
“We have people calling and asking questions, they’re scared to go to Walmart, they heard ICE is there,” Leyva said, referencing the acronym for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. “There’s a lot of uncertainty, even talking to people that have their Green Card, that are residents, they don’t even feel safe anymore.”
Latinos for Washington tentatively hopes to bring the festival back in 2026 according to Leyva, but she said those plans were up in the air for now.
The nonprofit is continuing with its other efforts in the meantime. Latinos For Washington has 15 students enrolled in its springtime run of citizenship classes, according to a press release, and still has a handful of educational workshops and high school scholarships lined up according to Leyva.
The festival’s cancellation came as a surprise to many community members, drawing somber and frustrated comments on Latinos for Washington’s Facebook page.
It has also sparked an outpouring of support according to Leyva, who said many community members have already reached out with kind words, or to offer donations to the local group.
“I’m just really appreciative of all that, because it just makes you feel like, ‘OK, there are people that are willing to help’ … and that’s wonderful,” she said. “And that is why I love Washington, because there are so many people that are welcoming and (want to) share your culture. And it’s sad when you don’t feel like you can share your culture, because of people being scared.”
Comments: Kalen.McCain@southeastiowaunion.com