The city regularly tops the list of the poorest cities in the US.
Guánchez, who came to Miami in the 1990s, will be voting for the first time in the United States.
The Latino vote will be key to winning Florida, a decisive state in the race for the White House.
Born in the United States to latino parents, they will both be voting for the first time.
Up the road is the Palacio de los Jugos, a café in Hialeah, where the population is 94% Latino, most of them Cuban exiles.
Fuente original: Hispanic vote in United States: The ambivalence of Miami’s Latino community toward Trump and Clinton | In English | EL PAÍS
