The need for immigration reform and the importance of growth in voter participation in the Latin community formed part of the work agenda for Rancho Humilde executives in Washington.
The executives of RANCHO HUMILDE, the number one record label in Mexican urban music, met with U.S Senator Alex Padilla (D-Calif), Chair of the Senate Judiciary, Subcommittee on Immigration, in Washington, D.C. to discuss key issues for the country’s Latin community.
On that day, RANCHO HUMILDE’s CEO Jimmy Humilde, accompanied by the label’s co-founding partners José Becerra and Roque Venegas and by Senator Padilla, held a schedule of meetings, including with Padilla, in which they addressed points such as the urgent need for immigration reform in the country, as well as the desirability for U.S. consulates and embassies to create panel discussions and educational programs that enable the discovery of hidden talents that can be developed in the U.S. market.
That same day, Humilde, Becerra, and Venegas met at the White House with President Joe Biden’s senior advisory team to assess possible ways for the Latin community to participate more in important voting processes at the national level. In this meeting, the record label executives also recommended the creation of spaces within the White House in which the music industry specifically can be addressed, and that features the participation of its most important players and the support of the State Department.
The close and continued relationship that Jimmy Humilde has traditionally had with the Latin community in Los Angeles County, the county with the largest Latin population in the country, has made his work as an executive of one of the most notable independent record labels in the country always has a social purpose.
The need for immigration reform and the importance of growth in voter participation in the Latin community formed part of the work agenda for Rancho Humilde executives in Washington.
Los Angeles, California. Friday, March 10, 2023. The executives of RANCHO HUMILDE, the number one record label in Mexican urban music, met with U.S Senator Alex Padilla (D-Calif), Chair of the Senate Judiciary, Subcommittee on Immigration, in Washington, D.C. to discuss key issues for the country’s Latin community.
On that day, RANCHO HUMILDE’s CEO Jimmy Humilde, accompanied by the label’s co-founding partners José Becerra and Roque Venegas and by Senator Padilla, held a schedule of meetings, including with Padilla, in which they addressed points such as the urgent need for immigration reform in the country, as well as the desirability for U.S. consulates and embassies to create panel discussions and educational programs that enable the discovery of hidden talents that can be developed in the U.S. market.
That same day, Humilde, Becerra, and Venegas met at the White House with President Joe Biden’s senior advisory team to assess possible ways for the Latin community to participate more in important voting processes at the national level. In this meeting, the record label executives also recommended the creation of spaces within the White House in which the music industry specifically can be addressed, and that features the participation of its most important players and the support of the State Department.
The close and continued relationship that Jimmy Humilde has traditionally had with the Latin community in Los Angeles County, the county with the largest Latin population in the country, has made his work as an executive of one of the most notable independent record labels in the country always has a social purpose.
Roque Venegas, Jimmy Humilde and José Becerra, executives of Rancho Humildes Records.
About Rancho Humilde
Rancho Humilde is a record label based in Los Angeles, California. Founded in 2008 by Jimmy Humilde, José ‘J.B’ Becerra, and Roque Venegas as an event production business, it was converted three years later into a record company. Rancho Humilde is the home of more than one hundred artists, among which stand out the names of major and established figures in Mexican urban music, such as Natanael Cano, OVI, Junio H, Victor Cibrian, Fuerza Regida and Herencia de Patrones, who share the same vision: to understand the tradition of regional Mexican music and interpret it for a generation of young fans, whose initial base was second and third generation Mexican Americans, and that today enjoys widespread popularity throughout the Latin community at a global level.