There are a lot of conservatives who want to wipe out Spanish in this country. They want to eliminate the choice of Spanish at ATMs or self-check in grocery stores.
Funny, but in my decades of working in Spanish language radio in the USA, I have never seen anything beyond a person or two who are bothered by "For English press 1 and for Spanish press 2" and then it is mostly because it seems to waste their time.
There have been non-English speakers going back to before this was a country. And there have always been a few intolerant morons who, at their core, fear things they don't understand.
They want to eliminate ESL programs in schools.
A very good idea. I never had trouble at a school where there was no SSL program. I had to wade through subjects like "ethics" and "social democracy" on my own with a dictionary and some copious notes.
I've even heard people at radio conventions say they want to eliminate Spanish radio. They say Spanish is the language of illiteracy. Some are very prominent politicians. They want to pass those laws. Rick Santorum was one of them. This kind of thinking is based on fear and lack of knowledge. The same kind of fear we saw today. But hey, look. Who cares? Let's stay with our biases and prejudices. It's much safer that way.
Yet the US has no official language and that is at the core of nation that was formed with an amalgamation of cultures and languages and races.
But, again, I've never run into a serious effort to limit other languages in the USA. I've never heard anyone say "Spanish is the language of illiteracy. Of course, once I was with a friend at a checkout line and speaking Spanish; we were told by a fat white woman that we'd never get a good job if we spoke "that language". My visiting friend was the PD of a group of over 100 stations in Colombia and I was VP of Univision.
And there are ignorant people of all sizes and shapes and parties and colors and cultures: in ultra-liberal LA I went to register my youngest daughter in public school and I was commanded to present a "green card or naturalization certificate" because she was born in Puerto Rico and was, otherwise, an illegal alien. Again, this was at a public school in its administrative office.