I am almost 100% sure that Latinos don’t care who lives together; the economy, jobs, inflation, etc, are almost always their primary concern.
I am not even sure that there will be sufficient time to do anything about it, but an article makes a point on overturning Obergefell. That is the case that allowed same sex couples to marry.
Having written the above, it is not an issue to them, but for the extreme religious fanatics, and there are not that many in the Latino community. Most are still Catholics, and other than maybe abortions, they do not feel strongly about other doctrines.

Conventional wisdom holds that the Supreme Court will decline the looming opportunity to disturb Obergefell v. Hodges, the 2015 landmark ruling recognizing a constitutional right to same-sex marriage. Polling shows that a substantial majority of Americans endorse legal recognition of gay marriage, so this court, the assumption seems to be, will leave well enough alone.
But there are a few signals that suggest otherwise — that the court could be preparing to both take up the case and reverse the decision, sending the question of legal access to gay marriage back to state legislatures. That would effectively do to Obergefell and gay marriage what the court did a few years ago to Roe v. Wade and abortion — reverse a prior decision and allow a patchwork of state laws to take its place.
We need to rid ourselves of the corrupt administration and the equally corrupt Supreme Court, and that can only be achieved by returning to the big tent theory. We must work together; otherwise, we will all fall, one group at a time.





