The Congressional Hispanic Conference (CHC) is a caucus of Republican members of Hispanic descent in the United States House of Representatives, dedicated to advancing the interests of Hispanic Americans via conservative legislative priorities.[1][2]
Founded in 2003 by Congressman Mario Diaz-Balart and fellow HispanicRepublicans, it emerged to provide a conservative voice distinct from the Democratic-led Congressional Hispanic Caucus, fostering collaboration on policies that promote economic growth, family values, and civic engagement across all national issues.[3][1]
The CHC challenges assumptions of Hispanic voters as a uniform constituency tied to narrow concerns, instead underscoring their integral role in U.S. democracy and the need for broad participation in governance.[1]
Through task forces and advocacy, it has prioritized areas like education reform, border security, and free enterprise to address socioeconomic challenges faced by Hispanic communities from a limited-government perspective.[3][2]
In the 119th Congress, Congressman Tony Gonzales serves as chair, leading efforts to integrate Hispanic viewpoints into Republican agendas amid growing electoral support for conservative policies among Hispanic voters.[4]
History
Formation and Founding Principles
The Congressional Hispanic Conference was founded in 2003 by Republican members of the U.S. House of Representatives of Hispanic descent, including Henry Bonilla of Texas, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen of Florida, Lincoln Diaz-Balart of Florida, and Mario Diaz-Balart of Florida, as a conservative alternative to the Democratic-leaning Congressional Hispanic Caucus.[3][1] The group's formation followed a series of policy disagreements, notably the 1997 resignations of Ros-Lehtinen and Lincoln Diaz-Balart from the Congressional Hispanic Caucus over its stance on Cuba policy, and escalated with opposition from that caucus to President George W. Bush's 2001 nomination of Miguel Estrada, a conservative Hispanic lawyer, to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit.[3] Hispanic Republicans criticized the caucus's actions as discriminatory and ideologically driven, aimed at blocking a qualified nominee to deny Bush a political victory rather than evaluating merits.[3] A rally on March 4, 2003, led by Mario Diaz-Balart protesting Estrada's treatment, highlighted the growing rift and catalyzed the conference's announcement later that month by Bonilla, who stated, "Time for the Hispanics of America to have an unbiased voice."[3]The founding principles centered on advancing conservative Republican values while representing the diverse interests of the Hispaniccommunity on a wide array of national and international issues, rejecting the notion of Hispanics as a "single-issue community" focused primarily on immigration or ethnicity.[1][3] The conference aimed to foster a forum for collaboration among Hispanic Republicans to develop a cohesive legislative agenda that promoted economic opportunity, limited government, traditional family structures, and strong national security—principles aligned with broader GOP priorities but tailored to counter narratives portraying Hispanic voters as monolithic or dependent on government intervention.[1][3] By emphasizing ideological diversity in appointments, such as supporting varied candidates for the federal judiciary, the founders sought to diversify representation without compromising conservative tenets, positioning the group as a counterweight to what they viewed as the partisan dominance of the Democratic caucus in Hispanic congressional advocacy.[3] This approach reflected a commitment to engaging Hispanics in "all the issues facing our nation," as articulated in the conference's mission, to elevate their role in democratic processes beyond ethnic silos.[1]
Early Years and Expansion (2003-2010)
The Congressional Hispanic Conference emerged in March 2003 amid tensions with the Democratic-led Congressional Hispanic Caucus, particularly over the latter's opposition to President George W. Bush's nomination of Miguel Estrada to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, which Hispanic Republicans attributed to partisan motivations rather than Estrada's qualifications.[5] Founded by Congressman Mario Díaz-Balart of Florida, the group included initial members such as Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, Lincoln Díaz-Balart, Henry Bonilla, and Devin Nunes, the latter of Portuguese-Azorean descent representing California's Central Valley.[6][3] Díaz-Balart led the organization as its inaugural chairman, with Nunes serving as vice-chair, focusing on promoting conservative policies including limited government, free markets, and individual responsibility to address issues facing the Hispanic community.[1][7]In its formative years, the Conference engaged in advocacy aligned with Republican priorities, such as supporting homeownership initiatives as a cornerstone of economic opportunity, highlighted in early collaborations with the Department of Housing and Urban Development.[7] Leadership transitioned with Nunes succeeded as vice-chair by Luis Fortuño, the first Puerto Rican Republican elected as resident commissioner, in 2005, reflecting the group's emphasis on expanding representation from Puerto Rico and other regions.[8] The CHC positioned itself as a counterpoint to the Democratic caucus, critiquing policies perceived as overly reliant on government intervention and advocating for school choice, border security, and faith-based initiatives tailored to Hispanic families.[3]Expansion during the mid-2000s coincided with incremental growth in HispanicRepublican membership in the House, bolstered by electoral gains in districts with significant Latino populations, such as Nunes' Central Valley seat won in 2002.[3] By the end of the decade, the Conference had solidified its role in legislative debates on immigration reform, trade, and energy policy, often diverging from Democratic approaches by prioritizing legal immigration pathways and economic liberalization over amnesty proposals.[9] This period marked the CHC's establishment as a cohesive voice for conservative Hispanic lawmakers, growing from a handful of founders to encompass a broader array of members as Republican outreach to Latino voters intensified ahead of the 2006 and 2008 elections.[5]
Developments in the 2010s and Beyond
During the 2010s, the Congressional Hispanic Conference maintained steady leadership under Chairman Mario Diaz-Balart (R-FL), who served from the 112th Congress (2011–2013) through the 116th Congress (2019–2021).[10] Under his tenure, the organization emphasized conservative policies addressing economic growth, school choice, and border security, rejecting portrayals of Hispanics as a single-issue constituency focused solely on immigration.[11] Membership remained modest but reflected incremental gains in Republican Hispanic representation in the House, aligning with broader electoral shifts toward conservative values among Hispanic voters on issues like entrepreneurship and family-centered education.[12]In the late 2010s and early 2020s, the CHC supported immigration reforms emphasizing enforcement and legal pathways, consistent with the Trump administration's priorities from 2017 to 2021, while advocating for comprehensive border measures to prioritize national security and economic opportunity.[12] Leadership transitioned to co-chairs Mario Diaz-Balart and Tony Gonzales (R-TX) for the 117th (2021–2023) and 118th (2023–2025) Congresses, enabling coordinated advocacy on fiscal responsibility and Hispanic-serving institutions amid partisan divides.[10]For the 119th Congress (2025–2027), Tony Gonzales assumed sole chairmanship on February 12, 2025, pledging increased visibility and engagement on priorities like deporting violent offenders and restoring funding for Hispanic-serving universities threatened by anti-DEI measures.[13][14] The group, comprising around 11 to 20 members, continues to counter assumptions of Hispanic political uniformity by promoting policies fostering self-reliance and opportunity, as evidenced by joint efforts on appropriations and immigration enforcement in the second Trump administration.[6][15]
Mission and Principles
Core Conservative Values
The Congressional Hispanic Conference (CHC) identifies limited government as a foundational principle, arguing that reduced federal intervention fosters personal responsibility, economic mobility, and self-reliance among Hispanic Americans, many of whom trace roots to entrepreneurial immigrant experiences. This stance aligns with broader Republican advocacy against expansive welfare programs, which CHC members contend can perpetuate dependency rather than empowerment.[16][17]Free enterprise and market-oriented policies form another pillar, with the CHC supporting trade liberalization and deregulation to drive job creation and prosperity in Hispanic-heavy sectors like small business and agriculture. For instance, early members endorsed the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) as a mechanism for economic integration and opportunity, reflecting a commitment to open markets over protectionism.[3][18]Individual liberty, including school choice and conservative judicial interpretations, underscores the CHC's platform, aiming to protect parental rights and constitutional originalism against perceived judicial overreach. Members have backed faith-based initiatives and voucher programs to enhance educational options, viewing these as extensions of personal freedom rooted in family decision-making.[19][3]Traditional family values receive emphasis, drawing from cultural norms prevalent in Hispanic communities, such as multi-generational households and religious observance, which CHC leaders promote as bulwarks against social fragmentation. This includes opposition to policies seen as undermining family structures, prioritizing instead initiatives that reinforce parental authority and community cohesion.[20]A robust national defense and rule of law complete the framework, with the CHC advocating secure borders, strong military posture, and enforcement against transnational threats to safeguard Hispanic communities from crime and instability. This reflects a realist approach to foreign policy, promoting democracy and free markets abroad while prioritizing American sovereignty at home.[16][19]
Policy Priorities Aligned with Hispanic Interests
The Congressional Hispanic Conference (CHC) identifies economic opportunity as a core priority for HispanicAmericans, emphasizing fiscal responsibility to foster job creation and reduce unemployment disparities. Hispanicunemployment stood at 11.3% compared to 8.8% for the overall population, underscoring the need for policies that stimulate private-sector growth.[21] The group advocates cutting federal spending—which reached post-World War II highs—and shrinking government scope, while lowering taxes and regulations to empower small businesses, noting that Hispanics own 6.6% of U.S. small businesses, the largest share among minority groups.[21][11] Expanding free trade with Latin America is also promoted to enhance economic ties beneficial to Hispanic entrepreneurs and communities with familial connections abroad.[11]In education, the CHC prioritizes local control over federalbureaucracy to deliver quality schooling tailored to community needs, critiquing the past decade's surge in federal spending and personnel as ineffective despite trillions allocated.[22] This stance supports state and parental authority in funding and curriculum decisions, aiming to ensure all children, including those in underperforming Hispanic-majority districts, access effective education without Washington-imposed uniformity.[22] Recent advocacy includes resuming federal grants for Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSIs), which enroll over 60% Latino students and drive upward mobility, as evidenced by a October 9, 2025, letter urging the Department of Education to restore Title V funding cuts.[23] Broader support for Minority-Serving Institutions (MSIs) highlights investments across demographics to bolster Hispanic educational attainment.[24]On border security and immigration, the CHC views the current system as "broken" and calls for reforms enabling legal pathways while enforcing laws to protect communities from crime and economic strain.[11] In June 2025, members urged prioritizing deportations of violent offenders and criminal aliens to safeguard public safety, aligning with Hispanic concerns over cartel violence and job competition in border regions.[14] These positions reflect the caucus's mission to advance Hispanic interests through secure borders that honor the nation's immigrant heritage without undermining rule of law.[25]Overall, these priorities—rooted in limited government and free enterprise—counter one-dimensional portrayals of Hispanic voters by engaging them on national issues like fiscal sustainability and family-supporting policies, drawing from the community's entrepreneurial spirit and aversion to overreach informed by Latin American experiences.[25] The CHC's agenda promotes Hispanic political engagement beyond singular focuses, fostering outcomes that enhance prosperity and security for working families.[25]
Organizational Structure
Leadership and Officers
The Congressional Hispanic Conference maintains a leadership structure comprising a Chairman, who oversees the organization's overall direction and priorities, and Vice Chairs tasked with specialized roles including policy development, communications, community outreach, and member services.[26]Leadership is elected by caucus members at the start of each Congress to advance conservative policies aligned with Hispanic community interests, such as economic growth, border security, and family values.[26][27]For the 119th Congress (2025–2027), the elected officers are as follows:
Supports internal caucus operations; first Mexican-born naturalized citizen in Arizona's federal office.[26]
The conference was founded in 2003 by Representative Mario Diaz-Balart (FL-26), who served as its inaugural Chairman and continues as a senior member influencing its conservative orientation.[26] Officers typically hold committee assignments in key areas like Appropriations, Ways and Means, and Energy and Commerce to amplify the caucus's legislative impact.[26]
Membership and Eligibility
The Congressional Hispanic Conference comprises Republican members of the U.S. House of Representatives who support its mission of promoting conservative policies aligned with Hispanic American interests.[28] Eligibility criteria are set internally by the organization, without formal statutory requirements, allowing the caucus to determine membership based on alignment with its principles rather than rigid ethnic or geographic mandates. While the group primarily draws from members of Hispanic or Latino descent, it has included individuals without direct Spanish-language heritage, such as those of Portuguese ancestry representing districts with substantial Hispanic populations, emphasizing active engagement over strict self-identification.[29] The conference operates exclusively in the House and excludes Senate members or Democrats, distinguishing it from the bipartisan origins of earlier Hispanic groups.[5]Membership has grown steadily, reflecting gains in Republican seats from Hispanic-majority districts following redistricting and electoral shifts. In the 118th Congress (2023–2025), the CHC reported its largest roster to date, with at least eight active members listed on its official site.[30][31] Key members included Rep. Mario Díaz-Balart (FL-26, Cuban-American), Chair Rep. Tony Gonzales (TX-23), Rep. David Valadao (CA-22), Rep. Brian Mast (FL-21, partial Mexican heritage), Rep. Carlos Giménez (FL-28, Cuban-American), Rep. Nicole Malliotakis (NY-11, Cuban and Greek heritage), Rep. María Elvira Salazar (FL-27, Cuban-American), and Rep. Juan Ciscomani (AZ-06, Mexican-American).[31] This expansion, driven by victories in competitive districts, underscores the caucus's role in amplifying conservative Hispanic voices amid broader partisan realignments in Latino voter bases.[32]
Legislative Activities
Key Policy Initiatives
The Congressional Hispanic Conference has prioritized fiscal responsibility, advocating for reduced federal spending and government scope to address unsustainable debt levels, where the government borrows nearly 40 cents for every dollar spent, with public debt projected to reach 100% of GDP by 2023 and continue rising thereafter.[21] This initiative includes pushing for low taxes, deregulation, and private sector growth to lower unemployment—particularly the 11.3% rate among Hispanics—and foster job creation, while supporting expanded free trade agreements across Latin America to benefit Hispanic-owned small businesses, which comprise 6.6% of U.S. small businesses.[21][11]In education policy, the CHC has campaigned against federal overreach, criticizing the influx of funding and Washington-based bureaucrats that have failed to improve outcomes despite increased resources over the past decade, arguing that such centralized approaches ignore local needs.[22] Instead, it promotes devolving authority to states, local officials, school administrators, teachers, and parents to implement customized reforms free from one-size-fits-all mandates, emphasizing quality education as essential for national prosperity and Hispanic community advancement.[22][11]On border security and immigration, the CHC has stressed reforming a "broken" system while recognizing the U.S. as a nation built by immigrants governed by laws, with recent efforts focusing on prioritizing deportations of violent offenders and convicted criminal aliens to enhance public safety.[11][14] In June 2025, Chairman Tony Gonzales led members in urging Immigration and Customs Enforcement to target such threats amid ongoing border challenges.[14][33]The CHC has also advanced higher education access for Hispanics, as in October 2025 when it called for resuming funding for Hispanic-Serving Institutions grant programs to support institutions serving large Hispanic student populations.[23] Additionally, in February 2025, it opposed budget resolutions lacking sufficient spending cuts, urging fiscal restraint to protect future generations from debt burdens.[34] These initiatives align with broader conservative emphases on family, faith, and economic opportunity for HispanicAmericans.[35]
Supported Legislation and Advocacy Efforts
The Congressional Hispanic Conference has advocated for immigration policies prioritizing border security and enforcement against criminal activity, emphasizing legal immigration pathways while opposing measures perceived as amnesty. In June 2025, Chairman Tony Gonzales led five fellow CHC members in a letter to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement urging prioritization of deportation operations targeting violent offenders, convicted criminal aliens, and national security threats over non-criminal cases.[14] Earlier, in April 2023, CHC members held a press conference highlighting the need for strengthened border measures amid record migrant encounters.[36] The group maintains that the U.S. immigration system is fundamentally broken and requires reforms centered on rule of law.[37]In education, the CHC supports localized control, school choice, and expanded access to quality schooling, while pushing for sustained federal investment in institutions serving Hispanic students. On October 9, 2025, the caucus sent a letter to the Department of Education calling for the resumption of funding for Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSI) grant programs, arguing that abrupt cuts undermine educational opportunities for Latino and other underserved students.[23] In June 2025, CHC members urged congressional appropriators to maintain funding for HSI initiatives, rejecting claims of discriminatory quotas and stressing their role in workforce development.[38] Additionally, in July 2025, Chairman Gonzales sponsored and advanced a bipartisan bill to safeguard funding for water infrastructure in colonias—underserved border communities—addressing health and sanitation needs in Hispanic-heavy areas.[39]Economically, the CHC promotes free trade expansion, tax relief, and fiscal restraint to foster opportunity for Hispanic entrepreneurs and workers, who own approximately 6.6% of U.S. small businesses. The group has endorsed free trade agreements to enhance Latin American commerce, as articulated in a 2011 press release supporting pending pacts.[40] In February 2025, CHC members wrote to House leadership backing a budget resolution aimed at reducing federal borrowing—then nearly 40 cents per dollar spent—and promoting pro-growth policies.[34] These efforts align with broader advocacy for market-oriented reforms over expansive government spending.The CHC has also supported targeted appropriations and health initiatives, including full funding for the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Latino in June 2025 via a letter to appropriators, and historical backing of the Minority AIDS Initiative for community-specific prevention funding.[41][42] In March 2024, co-chairs praised the House passage of fiscal year 2024 appropriations bills covering interior and environment, viewing them as steps toward responsible governance.[43]
Achievements and Impact
Policy Influences and Successes
The Congressional Hispanic Conference has advocated for free trade agreements to promote economic opportunities for Hispanic communities with strong ties to Latin America. In September 2007, the CHC endorsed the U.S.-Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement, highlighting its potential to expand markets and jobs, which contributed to the agreement's ratification by Congress and implementation on May 15, 2012.[18] This support aligned with the Conference's emphasis on free enterprise as a pathway to prosperity for immigrant families.[5]In higher education policy, the CHC has influenced appropriations for Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSIs), which enroll a significant portion of Latino students. Their advocacy helped secure a second round of increased funding in a 2008 appropriations bill, as commended by the Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities, building on prior investments to expand access and completion rates at these institutions.[44] This effort reflected the group's priority of limited-government solutions to educational attainment gaps in Hispanic communities.On national security and immigration, CHC members have shaped Republican-led initiatives emphasizing border enforcement and legal pathways. In June 2025, Chairman Tony Gonzales led five colleagues in prioritizing deportations of violent offenders and convicted criminal aliens, influencing House discussions on immigration enforcement amid record border encounters.[14] The Conference's focus on secure borders while opposing amnesty has informed fiscal and security legislation, including efforts to protect Medicaid eligibility amid reform debates.[45]Overall, the CHC's influences have amplified conservative policies tailored to Hispanic interests, such as school choice expansions and fiscal restraint, contributing to the group's membership growth to 18 by 2023 and heightened legislative input on issues from trade to homeland security.[46]
Contributions to Hispanic Conservatism
The Congressional Hispanic Conference (CHC) has advanced Hispanic conservatism by establishing a dedicated platform for Republican Hispanic lawmakers to promote policies rooted in limited government, free enterprise, and individual responsibility, countering the predominant liberal framing of Hispanic interests in Congress. Founded on January 6, 2003, by representatives including Mario Diaz-Balart, the organization coordinates on legislative priorities such as economic growth, education reform, and national security, which align with conservative emphases on self-reliance and opportunity over expansive government intervention.[3][1] This focus resonates with many Hispanic Americans' experiences, including entrepreneurial traditions and skepticism toward collectivist policies derived from Latin American histories of socialism.[3]Key contributions include advocacy for market-oriented reforms that empower Hispanic families, such as parental choice in education to address underperforming public schools in high-Hispanicdistricts, and fiscal restraint to sustain job-creating growth in sectors like energy and small business where Hispanics are disproportionately represented.[47] The CHC has also prioritized secure borders and immigration reforms emphasizing legal pathways and enforcement, as exemplified by member-led initiatives like the Dignity Act introduced in 2023, which seeks to curb illegal entries while expanding opportunities for lawful migration—principles that appeal to Hispanic voters valuing rule of law and community safety.[48] By delivering the Republican State of the Union response in Spanish in 2024 via member Monica De La Cruz, the CHC directly engaged Hispanic audiences with conservative messaging on prosperity and security, broadening outreach beyond English-dominant channels.[43]The CHC's expansion to a record 18 members by 2023 and sustained influence under chairs like Tony Gonzales in the 119th Congress (elected February 12, 2025) underscores its role in normalizing conservative leadership among Hispanics, challenging assumptions of monolithic Democratic loyalty and fostering voter shifts toward GOP priorities like tax relief and anti-inflation measures.[46][49] This organizational growth and targeted advocacy have helped elevate conservative voices in Hispanic-heavy districts, contributing to electoral gains by demonstrating policy alignments with cultural values such as family cohesion and faith-based community support.[15]
Criticisms and Controversies
Internal Divisions and Challenges
The Congressional Hispanic Conference has maintained a degree of internal cohesion attributable to its small, ideologically aligned membership of conservative Hispanic Republicans, but its limited size—typically 10 to 20 members—has posed ongoing challenges to exerting significant influence within the broader House Republican Conference.[6][15] This modest roster, smaller than the Democratic counterpart's, restricts the group's capacity for independent legislative leverage and amplifies the impact of individual member actions on its collective reputation.[9]Periods of reduced activity have compounded these structural hurdles; by 2021, the CHC was described as largely defunct, prompting Republican freshmen such as Maria Elvira Salazar and Carlos Gimenez to advocate for its relaunch as a more robust platform for Hispanic conservative priorities.[50] Such revitalization efforts underscore challenges in sustaining momentum amid fluctuating House compositions and competition for attention within the GOP.[51]While overt ideological splits within the CHC remain rare, tensions have arisen from members' occasional deviations toward bipartisan positions on immigration, an issue central to Hispanic constituencies. For instance, Chairman Tony Gonzales's endorsement of a 2023 bipartisan border security measure drew censure from the TexasRepublican Party and primary opposition portraying him as insufficiently conservative, indirectly testing the caucus's unity by highlighting variances between border-district pragmatism and national party hardline demands.[52] These episodes reflect broader challenges in balancing district-specific electoral pressures with caucus solidarity, though they have not led to formal fractures or membership losses.[53]
External Critiques and Partisan Conflicts
The Congressional Hispanic Conference has faced external critiques primarily from Democratic lawmakers and affiliated advocacy groups, who argue that its conservative policy positions, particularly on immigration enforcement, fail to adequately represent the broader interests of Hispanic Americans. Critics, including members of the Democratic-led Congressional Hispanic Caucus, contend that the Conference's advocacy for stricter border security and opposition to comprehensive amnesty measures prioritizes partisan Republican goals over humanitarian concerns such as family unity and pathways to citizenship for undocumented immigrants. For instance, in response to the Conference's support for enhanced deportation efforts under Republican administrations, Democratic leaders have accused the group of aligning with policies that disproportionately harm Latino communities, as articulated in statements from the Congressional Hispanic Caucus decrying "extreme MAGA values" in Republican Hispanic representatives.[54][55]A key partisan conflict stems from the 2003 formation of the Conference, when Republican Hispanic members departed the original bipartisan Congressional Hispanic Caucus due to irreconcilable differences over issues like immigration reform and economic policy, establishing two ideologically distinct organizations divided by party lines. This schism has led to mutual exclusions, exemplified by the 2022 denial of membership to Rep. Mayra Flores (R-TX) in the Democratic Caucus, which cited updated bylaws limiting participation to Democrats and referenced her support for border security as incompatible with the group's priorities. Democratic spokespeople justified the rejection by noting the prior Republican split and framing Conference members' stances—such as backing the border wall and ending catch-and-release—as antithetical to Latino advocacy, thereby portraying the Conference as a partisan outlier rather than a unifying voice.[3][56]Further tensions arise in legislative battles, where the Conference's push for merit-based immigration and opposition to certain Democratic-backed programs, like expansive DACA expansions, draws rebukes from left-leaning immigration advocates who label such positions as insufficiently compassionate or influenced by GOP donor interests. Groups like America's Voice have specifically criticized Conference Chair Rep. Tony Gonzales (R-TX) for endorsing National Republican Congressional Committee ads targeting Latino Democrats on crime and border issues, deeming them racially divisive despite the Conference's emphasis on legal immigration and economic opportunity as core Hispanic priorities. These critiques often emanate from sources with demonstrated partisan leanings toward expansive immigration policies, overlooking polling data showing growing Hispanic support for enforcement measures amid rising concerns over fentanyl and cartel activity.[57][58]
Recent Developments
Leadership Transitions (2023-2025)
In January 2023, the Congressional Hispanic Conference announced Congressman Mario Diaz-Balart (FL-26) and Congressman Tony Gonzales (TX-23) as co-chairs for the 118th Congress (2023–2025), a structure intended to provide joint leadership on policy priorities affecting Hispanic communities.[59] This arrangement followed Gonzales's prior role as vice chair in the previous Congress and built on Diaz-Balart's long-standing involvement, including his role in founding the CHC in 2003.[59]The co-chairs collaborated on initiatives such as hosting press conferences on border security and economic issues pertinent to Hispanic constituents during the 118th Congress.[60] No mid-term leadership changes were reported in 2023 or 2024.At the outset of the 119th Congress in January 2025, the CHC transitioned to a single-chair model, electing Tony Gonzales as chairman on February 12, 2025. This shift consolidated authority under Gonzales, the first Texan to hold the position, amid a Republican majority in the House and increased Hispanic representation in the GOP caucus.[61] Diaz-Balart continued as a senior member but stepped back from the top leadership role. As of October 2025, Gonzales remained in the chairmanship with no further transitions announced.[28]
Ongoing Initiatives and Positions
The Congressional Hispanic Conference (CHC), under Chairman Tony Gonzales (R-TX) elected in February 2025 for the 119th Congress, emphasizes amplifying Hispanic Republican voices on policy priorities including border security, fiscal restraint, and education reform.[49] Gonzales has pledged to "turn up the heat" by leveraging members' committee assignments to advance "kitchen table issues" such as securing the southern border, achieving energy dominance, and protecting the child tax credit, drawing on the bloc's increased visibility following 46% Hispanic support for Donald Trump in the 2024 election.[15]On border security and immigration, the CHC maintains that the U.S. immigration system is broken and requires securing borders to protect national security and economic prosperity, prioritizing enforcement against violent offenders and convicted criminal aliens over broad measures.[58] In June 2025, Gonzales and four CHC colleagues urged the Trump administration to focus deportation operations on such high-risk individuals.[14] The group advocates reforming the system while upholding the rule of law, viewing the U.S. as a nation of immigrants and laws.[11]In economic policy, the CHC criticizes federal fiscal practices, noting that the government borrows nearly 40 cents for every dollar spent, with public debt projected to reach unsustainable levels, and calls for cutting spending, shrinking government scope, maintaining low taxes, and reducing regulations to foster private-sector job growth and opportunity.[21] It supports expanding free trade agreements across Latin America to stimulate economic growth benefiting Hispanic-owned businesses, which comprise 6.6% of U.S. small businesses.[11]Regarding education, the CHC opposes excessive federal involvement, arguing that increased Washington spending and bureaucracy have failed to resolve school challenges, and instead promotes state- and local-led policies tailored to community needs, rejecting one-size-fits-all mandates.[47] In October 2025, the CHC advocated resuming funding for Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSIs) grant programs to enhance educational access for Latino students.[23] It also supports broader investments in Minority-Serving Institutions to advance opportunities across demographics.[24]The CHC continues to prioritize traditional values and individual liberty, collaborating selectively with counterparts on bipartisan issues while engaging the Trump administration on immigration enforcement to ensure Hispanic community concerns are addressed.[15]