Proyecto Dignidad
Proyecto Dignidad (English: Project Dignity, PD) is a conservative political party in Puerto Rico established on March 24, 2019, to provide an alternative focused on family values, entrepreneurship, and public integrity.[1] The party emphasizes the inviolable dignity of the person, a culture of life from gestation to natural death, protection of the traditional family, parental rights in education, and opposition to gender ideology in public schools.[2] It promotes freedom of religion, conscience, and expression, alongside economic policies fostering productivity, agroindustry, and self-determination in Puerto Rico's political status.[2] Certified as a political party on January 22, 2020, after gathering over 47,000 endorsements, Proyecto Dignidad achieved 7% of the vote in the 2020 general elections, securing seats for representatives such as Lisie J. Burgos Muñiz and Joanne Rodríguez Veve.[1] In the 2024 elections, it obtained 6.38% of the votes (81,369 ballots), revalidating its registration for a third term and demonstrating sustained appeal among voters prioritizing faith-based conservatism amid Puerto Rico's shifting political landscape.[1] The party's rise reflects growing support for religiously informed governance, drawing from Catholic and evangelical communities disillusioned with established parties' handling of corruption, economic stagnation, and social issues.[3] While lacking major legislative dominance, its consistent electoral performance positions it as a voice for moral and fiscal reform, advocating transparent public service and community-centered policies.[2]History
Founding in 2019
Proyecto Dignidad was founded on March 24, 2019, by César A. Vázquez Muñiz, a physician from Aguadilla who had not previously affiliated with any political party.[4] The initiative aimed to establish a new political option in Puerto Rico centered on Christian democratic principles, family values, and advocacy for U.S. statehood, responding to perceived shortcomings in the dominant parties' governance and ethical standards.[1] On March 29, 2019, the group filed initial documentation with the Puerto Rico State Elections Commission (CEE) to register as a citizens' group, followed by the first founders' meeting on March 31 to outline a vision for Puerto Rico's future, symbolized by a turquoise emblem representing aspirations and renewal.[1] The CEE certified the registration on May 4, 2019, and authorized endorsement collection on May 16, enabling the drive to gather the required signatures for formal party status. The inaugural public presentation occurred on May 13 in Ponce.[1] Throughout June to October 2019, Proyecto Dignidad organized endorsement campaigns across Puerto Rico's eight senatorial districts, establishing 11 permanent centers and recruiting over 500 notaries to validate signatures. By November 24, 2019, the party's first assembly in Caguas reported approximately 30,000 endorsements collected, with plans to secure an additional 25,000 to meet certification thresholds.[1] This grassroots effort positioned Proyecto Dignidad as the fifth registered political party in Puerto Rico by early 2020, emphasizing transparency, anti-corruption measures, and value-based leadership.[5]Participation in the 2020 general election
Proyecto Dignidad contested the Puerto Rican general election on November 3, 2020, as a newly registered minor party, focusing its efforts on legislative and municipal races rather than the governorship or resident commissioner position.[1] The party nominated candidates primarily through the accumulation voting system, which allows voters to allocate multiple votes to preferred candidates within a party to maximize representation for smaller parties.[6] Key candidates included Lisie Janet Burgos Muñiz for the House of Representatives at-large seat by accumulation and Joanne Rodríguez Veve for the Senate at-large seat by accumulation, alongside Héctor Andrés Santiago for a municipal assembly position in Río Grande.[1][6] In the House race, Burgos Muñiz received 72,386 votes, placing fourth among accumulation candidates and securing one of the party's seats in the chamber.[6] Rodríguez Veve similarly achieved success in the Senate contest, contributing to the party's capture of one at-large seat there.[1] These outcomes marked Proyecto Dignidad's first electoral victories, with the party earning nearly 7% of the overall vote share across contested races, sufficient to confirm its status as a recognized political party under Puerto Rican electoral law.[1] The results reflected modest but notable support for the party's conservative platform emphasizing family values, entrepreneurship, and opposition to certain reforms, amid a fragmented electorate disillusioned with the dominant New Progressive and Popular Democratic parties.[1] The party's strategy prioritized targeted legislative influence over broad executive bids, allowing it to leverage voter dissatisfaction without diluting resources in unwinnable top races. No major controversies surrounded its participation, though it aligned with multipartisan efforts against proposed electoral changes by the ruling New Progressive Party.[1] Overall turnout in the election was approximately 55%, with Proyecto Dignidad's performance signaling the potential for minor parties to gain footholds in Puerto Rico's proportional representation system for at-large seats.[6]Post-2020 expansion and challenges (2021–2023)
Following the 2020 general election, in which Proyecto Dignidad secured two seats in the Puerto Rico Legislative Assembly—including one in the Senate for Joanne Rodríguez Veve—the party focused on organizational consolidation and broader outreach. Legislative representatives introduced bills addressing economic relief and opposed proposed electoral reforms by the New Progressive Party (PNP), collaborating with other parties on multipartisan efforts.[7][1] By early 2022, the party's House spokesperson initiated legislative sessions with an expanded agenda, signaling internal capacity building amid limited resources as a nascent entity.[8] Expansion accelerated in 2023, with the party holding its annual convention in March to emphasize sustained growth and future electoral viability, planning additional events for state-level candidacies and internal primaries. Fundraising efforts yielded tens of thousands more dollars than in the prior cycle, supported by donors from the U.S. mainland Puerto Rican community, enabling preparations to field dozens of candidates for various elective offices by November. The party attracted defectors from established parties, including 12 candidates who had previously run under the PPD or PNP banners, and secured endorsements such as from a PNP-affiliated incumbent mayor for a former vice mayor's mayoral bid. Polling by El Nuevo Día in 2023 reflected a 48% positive impression rating, indicating rising visibility among conservative and faith-oriented voters.[9][7][10] Challenges persisted, particularly legal hurdles from opponents. In June 2023, Puerto Rico's Supreme Court ruled to remove several Proyecto Dignidad candidates from ballots following a lawsuit backed by the Popular Democratic Party (PPD), disrupting slate preparations and highlighting vulnerabilities for minor parties in navigating electoral regulations. Internal strains emerged later that year, exemplified by the December disaffiliation of gubernatorial aspirant Ada Norah Henriquez, who opted for an independent run, potentially signaling tensions over strategy or leadership. These obstacles underscored the difficulties of scaling operations in a polarized system dominated by the PPD and PNP, where smaller parties face ballot access barriers and competition for conservative voters overlapping with the PNP base.[7][11]Role in the 2024 elections and alliances
Proyecto Dignidad contested the November 5, 2024, Puerto Rican general elections independently, without entering into formal electoral alliances with the major parties such as the pro-statehood New Progressive Party (PNP) or the commonwealth-status Popular Democratic Party (PPD). The party nominated Javier Jiménez Pérez as its candidate for governor, who garnered 81,369 votes amid a total gubernatorial turnout exceeding 1.2 million ballots. This performance underscored the party's marginal electoral footprint, as it failed to secure the governorship, which was won by PNP candidate Jenniffer González Colón with approximately 39.45% of the vote.[12] For the resident commissioner position, Proyecto Dignidad fielded Viviana Ramírez-Morales, who participated in the race but did not prevail, with the seat going to the PNP incumbent.[13] The party also presented candidates for Senate and House seats via accumulation and district-specific ballots, including efforts to retain or expand representation from prior cycles, though it achieved no major legislative gains in the certified results. Incumbent senator Joanne Rodríguez-Vévé, elected under the party's banner in 2020, publicly critiqued post-election dynamics, attributing potential vote dilution to the PNP's aggressive campaigning against the left-leaning Alianza de País (comprising the Puerto Rican Independence Party and Citizen's Victory Movement).[14] Despite lacking pacts, Proyecto Dignidad's platform aligned ideologically with the PNP on statehood advocacy and social conservatism, positioning it to attract overlapping voter bases disillusioned with establishment politics. Analysts noted that the absence of coordination may have splintered conservative turnout, contributing to a fragmented pro-statehood bloc in a contest marked by high abstention and third-party surges elsewhere.[15] The party's independent run emphasized its core principles of Christian democratic governance and family values, aiming to differentiate from the dominant bipartisanship while building long-term viability ahead of future cycles.[16]Reorganization and leadership transitions (2024–2025)
Following the 2024 general elections, Javier Jiménez stepped down as president of Proyecto Dignidad during a Governing Council meeting on November 23, 2024, transferring leadership to founder César Vázquez Muñiz.[17] Vázquez assumed the role temporarily to oversee internal reorganization efforts, aimed at consolidating the party's base, maintaining its registration status, and preparing for future electoral challenges, with the process set to culminate at a general assembly in mid-2025.[17] As part of this transition, Nilda Pérez Martínez was reinstated as secretary general.[17] In July 2025, Proyecto Dignidad formally launched its internal reorganization to enhance organizational capacity, foster ethical governance, and broaden citizen participation ahead of the 2028 elections.[18] This included updating structural frameworks and initiating elections for the Governing Council, with certified candidacies for the presidency from Pérez Martínez, then secretary general, and Dora Colón, a former Caguas mayoral candidate.[18] On July 21, 2025, Vázquez announced his resignation from the presidency, effective August 9, 2025, citing a desire to prioritize his professional work, family, and health after leading the party since its 2019 founding.[19] He committed to remaining on the Governing Council to support ongoing initiatives.[19] At the general assembly held in Caguas on August 9, 2025, members elected Nilda Pérez Martínez as the party's first female president in a democratic vote.[20][21] The assembly also ratified new Governing Council members, including positions for vice president and public interest representatives, marking a generational shift while emphasizing continuity in the party's Christian democratic principles.[20] Pérez, a consultant with over 20 years in organizational development, expressed intentions to strengthen oversight and expand the party's influence without ruling out a 2028 gubernatorial candidacy.[22][21]Ideology and Core Principles
Christian democratic foundations
Proyecto Dignidad's ideological foundations are rooted in Christian principles, positing that the dignity of every human being derives from God as the ultimate source. The party's Declaration of Principles explicitly states its "confianza en el Dios todo Poderoso quien es la fuente de la dignidad," framing political responsibility as accountable to both divine authority and the Puerto Rican populace. This theological underpinning informs a commitment to uphold human dignity in governance, integrating faith-based ethics with democratic processes to pursue justice, transparency, and public welfare.[23] Central to these foundations is the application of Christian social teachings to policy, emphasizing subsidiarity through the prioritization of family structures and protection of vulnerable groups. The principles affirm the sanctity of life "desde la fecundación hasta su terminación natural," alongside reverence for the family, children, and the elderly, as pillars of societal solidarity. This approach aligns with broader Christian democratic traditions by advocating for a moral order that balances individual rights with communal responsibilities, rejecting secular relativism in favor of absolute values derived from scriptural and doctrinal sources.[23] The party's vision extends these foundations to democratic reform, promoting a "Puerto Rico próspero y solidario" through ethical leadership untainted by corruption or clientelism. By invoking God's guidance—"Así nos ayude Dios"—Proyecto Dignidad positions itself as a movement transcending partisan expediency, drawing adherents from varied social backgrounds unified by shared convictions in divine sovereignty over human affairs. This framework critiques prevailing political decay as a departure from principled stewardship, aiming instead for transformative governance grounded in eternal truths rather than transient ideologies.[23][3]Positions on social and family values
Proyecto Dignidad upholds Christian values as foundational to its social policy framework, asserting that human dignity derives from God and extends to all individuals from conception onward. The party's declaration of principles prioritizes the protection of life from fertilization to natural death, positioning it alongside family support, child welfare, and care for the elderly as essential governmental responsibilities.[23] This stance reflects a commitment to policies that safeguard vulnerable populations against practices deemed incompatible with inherent human dignity. On family values, the party advocates for the traditional family unit as a societal cornerstone, emphasizing its role in moral and social stability. It promotes broad religious freedom and freedom of conscience, while grounding public policy in longstanding Christian principles that have sustained developed societies. Education is identified as a key area for intervention, with the party calling for curricula free from gender ideology to preserve these values.[23] Regarding abortion, Proyecto Dignidad opposes unrestricted access, particularly for minors, and has introduced legislative measures requiring parental consent or involvement before procedures on those under 18.[24] [25] Party leaders have clarified that the focus is not on criminalizing women who undergo abortions but on providing support, alternatives, and resources to prevent them, aligning with the pro-life priority while emphasizing compassion and assistance post-procedure.[26] [27] The party maintains a conservative posture on marriage and sexuality, resisting redefinitions that alter traditional family norms, as evidenced by public statements critiquing judicial impositions of same-sex marriage and related shifts in family values.[28] While open to candidates from diverse backgrounds who align with its principles, Proyecto Dignidad requires adherence to its Christian democratic tenets, which implicitly prioritize heterosexual marriage and reject expansions of rights that conflict with biblical foundations.[29] This approach has drawn criticism from human rights advocates for perceived opposition to LGBTQ+ expansions, though the party frames its positions as defenses of religious liberty and natural law.[30]Economic and governance philosophy
Proyecto Dignidad advocates for an economic model centered on rescuing Puerto Rico from fiscal bankruptcy through the development of a productive economy that prioritizes entrepreneurship, business initiative, and community strengthening to enable quality of life derived from individual and collective work efforts.[2] This approach emphasizes self-reliance and productivity over dependency on government programs, promoting socially and environmentally responsible entrepreneurial activities as key to economic development.[31] The party supports policies that foster agroindustry to enhance food security and local welfare, viewing economic growth as intertwined with family and community resilience rather than expansive state intervention.[2] In governance, Proyecto Dignidad promotes a depoliticized public administration and judiciary where selections are based on merit rather than political affiliation, aiming to restore trust through veracity and honesty to combat entrenched corruption.[2][31] The government's role is framed as serving the common good by focusing on essential services such as health, security, and education, while centering public policies on the family unit as society's foundational element and upholding private property rights alongside civil liberties.[31] This conservative framework seeks to preserve core values and institutions that sustain freedoms and social order, empowering civil society and communities to drive progress independently of bureaucratic overreach.[31]Political Stance on Puerto Rico's Status
Advocacy for statehood
Proyecto Dignidad supports Puerto Rico's right to political self-determination through a democratic process that includes statehood as a viable option, but party leaders emphasize that any status change, including admission as a U.S. state, requires prior comprehensive internal reforms in governance, economy, and social structures.[32] The party critiques unilateral pushes for statehood, such as those by the New Progressive Party (PNP), arguing that without addressing corruption, family breakdown, and fiscal mismanagement, statehood alone cannot resolve Puerto Rico's challenges.[33] For instance, candidate Javier Jiménez stated that Puerto Ricans "can’t aspire for any change in our status... until [we] ‘put our house in order,’" prioritizing moral and institutional renewal over immediate status debates.[7] In practice, Proyecto Dignidad has aligned electorally with the pro-statehood PNP, forming an informal alliance that absorbed much of its conservative voter base during the 2024 elections, thereby bolstering statehood advocacy indirectly.[15][34] This partnership reflects overlapping goals on U.S. integration, with the party endorsing congressional initiatives on status resolution, including draft bills that facilitate plebiscites leading to potential statehood.[35] However, Proyecto Dignidad maintains no explicit preference for statehood over other options like independence or free association, viewing the status question as secondary to restoring dignity through Christian democratic principles.[7] This nuanced approach distinguishes it from traditional pro-statehood parties, focusing advocacy on a reformed Puerto Rico prepared for equal statehood on terms preserving cultural and moral integrity.[36]Critiques of alternative status options
Proyecto Dignidad maintains a position of political neutrality on specific status options such as statehood, independence, or enhanced commonwealth, prioritizing instead the Puerto Rican people's right to self-determination through a fair process. The party critiques the perpetuation of the current commonwealth (Estado Libre Asociado) status as sustaining a colonial dynamic that denies full democratic rights, including voting representation in the U.S. Congress and Electoral College, while fostering economic dependency without equitable benefits. This view aligns with their support for federal plebiscites to resolve the issue definitively, as evidenced by their endorsement of draft legislation proposing a binding vote in 2023.[37] The party has voiced concerns over alternatives like independence, warning against any steering of Puerto Rico toward sovereignty in opposition to the majority will, which polls consistently show lacks broad support (typically under 5% in referendums). Such a path, they argue, risks economic isolation and loss of U.S. citizenship protections, exacerbating vulnerabilities exposed by events like Hurricane Maria in 2017, where federal aid was crucial despite territorial limitations. Independence proposals are seen as ideologically driven rather than pragmatic, potentially undermining family-oriented and Christian democratic values by severing ties to a constitutional framework aligned with those principles.[38] Enhanced commonwealth variants, often championed by the Popular Democratic Party (PPD), face implicit criticism from Proyecto Dignidad for failing to address core inequities, such as non-voting delegates and fiscal oversight under PROMESA (2016), which they view as symptoms of unresolved territorial ambiguity rather than viable enhancements. The party advocates internal reforms—governance transparency, family policy strengthening, and economic self-reliance—as prerequisites to any status transition, arguing that alternatives distract from these without delivering parity or stability. This stance reflects alliances with pro-resolution groups while avoiding partisan entrenchment in traditional divides.[7]Alignment with U.S. integration
Proyecto Dignidad does not adopt an institutional position advocating for Puerto Rico's integration into the United States as a state, prioritizing internal governance reforms over status resolution. Its Declaration of Principles explicitly states that the party will not advance any specific political-juridical relationship with the U.S., leaving such decisions to individual members and deferring action until it demonstrably benefits the Puerto Rican populace.[23] Party commentary critiques statehood proposals from allies like the pro-statehood Partido Nuevo Progresista (PNP) for fostering excessive federal dependency without promoting local entrepreneurship or economic independence, deeming such integration unattainable under current conditions.[33] Leaders, including gubernatorial candidate Javier Jiménez, argue that Puerto Rico must first achieve fiscal stability, reduce corruption, and strengthen social institutions before considering deeper U.S. ties, encapsulated in the view that the island cannot "aspire for any change in our status… until Puerto Ricans ‘put our house in order.’"[7] This stance reflects a conditional alignment with U.S. integration, contingent on Puerto Rico demonstrating self-sufficiency to avoid perpetuating colonial-like dependencies. While the party's Christian democratic values—emphasizing limited government, family protections, and individual responsibility—overlap with U.S. conservative principles that could facilitate smoother incorporation if pursued, Proyecto Dignidad supports only processes ensuring genuine self-determination, criticizing unilateral plebiscites lacking federal recognition as insufficient for meaningful integration.[36] Strategic alliances with the PNP provide indirect support to statehood efforts through shared conservative voter bases, but without endorsing full integration as a immediate priority.[39]Organizational Structure
Leadership and key figures
Dr. César Vázquez Muñiz, a physician, founded Proyecto Dignidad on March 24, 2019, following an initial organizers' meeting on March 31, 2019, aimed at establishing a new political path emphasizing conservative values and governance reform.[1] He assumed the party presidency on November 25, 2024, after receiving the position from outgoing president Javier Jiménez Pérez, amid post-election reorganization efforts.[17] Vázquez led the party through internal transitions but stepped down on August 9, 2025, citing personal reasons including health, family, and professional commitments after approximately five years of involvement in leadership roles.[40] [41] Javier Jiménez Pérez, a certified public accountant and former mayor of San Sebastián from 2005 to 2024, served as party president leading up to the 2024 general elections.[42] He ran as Proyecto Dignidad's gubernatorial candidate, securing 81,369 votes or 6.38% of the total, marking the party's strongest electoral showing to date despite not winning.[1] Jiménez, who also held prior roles such as co-president of the Council of Mayors (2005–2008) and president of the Association of Mayors (2009–2012), emphasized anti-corruption and statehood advocacy during his campaign.[43] On August 9, 2025, during the party's general assembly in Caguas, Nilda Pérez Martínez, an organizational development consultant with over 20 years of experience in executive training and productivity enhancement, was elected president after defeating challenger César Vázquez in a democratic vote.[20] [44] Her leadership focuses on internal strengthening ahead of the 2028 elections. In October 2025, the party appointed José Roberto Acosta López as secretary general and Javier Eduardo Márquez as electoral commissioner to bolster administrative and campaign operations.[45] Other prominent figures include mayoral candidates such as Wanda Arzuaga López in Juncos, who campaigned on local community engagement, and Rafael González Pratts in Ponce, representing the party's expansion into municipal races.[7] [46] These transitions reflect Proyecto Dignidad's efforts to consolidate conservative, faith-based leadership while navigating limited electoral success and internal challenges.[47]Membership recruitment and internal governance
Proyecto Dignidad recruits members primarily through an open online process, where individuals submit a form to register as miembros bona fide, enabling participation in party teams, alternative proposals, and defense of core values such as Christian democratic principles.[48] This approach emphasizes broad accessibility, drawing from diverse social backgrounds aligned with the party's conservative platform, without specified fees, age restrictions, or formal vetting beyond self-identification with its declaration of principles.[48] [23] Recruitment efforts focus on grassroots engagement, including calls for unity and donations via the official website, to build support for statehood advocacy and ethical governance.[3] Internal governance operates under a framework of formal regulations, including the Reglamento General de Proyecto Dignidad for overall party operations and the Reglamento Interno del Consejo de Gobierno for the 2025 Government Council, which handles strategic decision-making and leadership oversight.[49] The structure decentralizes authority through Comités Municipales, regulated by dedicated bylaws and a financial manual, allowing local committees to manage regional activities while adhering to national standards.[49] Candidate selection follows the Reglamento y Manual de Método Alterno y de Elección de Candidatos, prescribing alternative processes for primaries or endorsements, supplemented by a Reglamento de Querellas effective April 26, 2025, for resolving internal disputes.[49] Leadership positions, such as the party presidency, are determined via internal elections, as demonstrated by the July 2025 challenge where organizational consultant Nilda Pérez Martínez announced her candidacy against incumbent César Vázquez, reflecting competitive selection among members.[50] Pérez Martínez currently serves as president, indicating the outcome favored her bid and underscoring the party's emphasis on accountable, value-driven internal accountability.[3] These mechanisms aim to ensure fidelity to founding principles established in the March 31, 2019, organizational meeting, prioritizing ethical conduct over factionalism.[1]Alliances and coalitions
Proyecto Dignidad has operated independently from Puerto Rico's major political parties, eschewing formal electoral coalitions to maintain its identity as a distinct conservative alternative to the New Progressive Party (PNP) and Popular Democratic Party (PPD), which it criticizes for corruption and ideological drift.[7] In the 2020 and 2024 general elections, the party fielded its own slates of candidates without merging or endorsing tickets from established parties, allowing it to capture votes from disillusioned conservatives—such as 7% for gubernatorial candidate Javier Jiménez in 2024—while avoiding vote-splitting arrangements.[51] This independence reflects a strategy prioritizing moral and governance reforms over tactical pacts, even amid shared stances with the PNP on statehood.[7] Rather than political coalitions, Proyecto Dignidad builds alliances with conservative religious institutions, particularly Catholic and evangelical communities, which serve as core mobilization networks. These ties, amplified after disasters like Hurricanes Maria (2017) and subsequent earthquakes, involve church-led community aid and values-based workshops that align with the party's Christian democratic platform.[7] Many candidates, including mayoral hopeful Wanda Arzuaga López—an evangelical lay chaplain—leverage personal church affiliations to engage voters on family and ethical issues, fostering volunteer-driven campaigns independent of state party structures.[7] The party has also drawn informal support from PNP defectors seeking a more staunchly conservative outlet, exemplified by Jiménez's 2024 gubernatorial run after serving as that party's San Sebastián mayor, and endorsements from former PNP local officials like a vice mayor in the same municipality.[7] These individual crossovers bolster Proyecto Dignidad's ranks without formal agreements, enabling growth from 29 candidates in 2020 to over 400 in 2024, though they highlight tensions with the PNP over perceived liberalization.[7] Overall, such relational networks emphasize grassroots faith-based coalitions over institutionalized party mergers, sustaining the party's niche appeal among socially conservative voters.[7]Electoral History
Gubernatorial races
Proyecto Dignidad did not field a candidate in the 2020 gubernatorial election, focusing instead on other races such as resident commissioner and legislative positions.[3][52] The party nominated Javier Jiménez Pérez as its gubernatorial candidate for the November 5, 2024, election.[16] A certified public accountant and long-serving mayor of San Sebastián since 2005, Jiménez campaigned on Proyecto Dignidad's platform emphasizing Christian conservative values, statehood for Puerto Rico, anti-corruption measures, and fiscal responsibility.[3][53] Jiménez received 73,613 votes, accounting for 6.63% of the total votes cast in the gubernatorial race.[54] This performance placed him behind the major party candidates, with Jenniffer González Colón of the New Progressive Party securing victory at 39.45%.[54][12] Following the election, Jiménez expressed satisfaction with the results as a foundation for future growth, amid the party's reorganization efforts toward 2028.[55][47]Resident Commissioner contests
In the 2020 Puerto Rican general election, Proyecto Dignidad nominated attorney Ada Norah Henriquez as its candidate for Resident Commissioner. Henriquez, who emphasized the party's pro-statehood and values-based platform, received 95,873 votes out of approximately 2.4 million cast in the race. This performance, while insufficient to secure victory—won by Jenniffer González-Colón of the New Progressive Party—marked an initial electoral foothold for the party in federal representation contests. Proyecto Dignidad again fielded a candidate in the 2024 Resident Commissioner election on November 5, 2024, selecting consultant Viviana Ramirez-Morales. Ramirez-Morales campaigned on themes of economic integration with the U.S., anti-corruption measures, and alignment with Republican priorities in Congress. She obtained 60,512 votes, equivalent to about 4.96% of the total, placing behind the winner Pablo José Hernández Rivera of the Popular Democratic Party. The result reflected the party's continued niche appeal amid competition from established parties but no advancement to victory.[13][56] These contests highlight Proyecto Dignidad's strategy of leveraging the Resident Commissioner role to advocate for statehood and conservative reforms, though vote shares remained limited, consistent with the party's emerging status and focus on mobilizing a specific ideological base rather than broad electoral dominance.[57]Legislative assembly elections
In the 2020 Puerto Rican general elections held on November 3, Proyecto Dignidad fielded candidates for both the Senate and House of Representatives, including through the at-large accumulation process for the 11 non-district seats in each chamber. The party garnered sufficient votes in the accumulation vote to secure one Senate seat and one House seat, marking its entry into the Legislative Assembly as a newly formed entity. These victories were attributed to its platform emphasizing Christian values, anti-corruption measures, and statehood advocacy, which resonated with a niche electorate amid widespread dissatisfaction with established parties.[58] The elected representatives included candidates nominated via accumulation, as announced by party leadership in June 2020, reflecting strategic focus on high-profile at-large races rather than district competitions where smaller parties face steeper barriers. Official results from the State Elections Commission documented votes for Proyecto Dignidad's accumulation slates, contributing to the threshold met for the seats.[59][60] This outcome positioned the party to influence legislative debates on governance reforms, though its limited numbers constrained broader impact. For the 2024 general elections on November 5, Proyecto Dignidad presented a slate of candidates for legislative positions, announced publicly on July 24 in front of the Capitol. The party targeted both district and at-large seats, aligning with its ongoing push for representation on issues like fiscal responsibility and social conservatism. Despite participation, certified results confirmed no seats won in the Senate or House, with the New Progressive Party maintaining dominance and other minor parties like the Citizen's Victory Movement retaining limited presence. Voter turnout and vote distribution favored major parties, underscoring challenges for emerging groups in Puerto Rico's first-past-the-post district system and proportional accumulation thresholds.[61][62][63]| Election Year | Senate Seats Won | House Seats Won | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2020 | 1 (at-large) | 1 (at-large) | Via accumulation vote; debut legislative presence.[58] |
| 2024 | 0 | 0 | Participated but below thresholds for seats.[61][63] |