Misplaced Pages

Congressional Hispanic Leadership Institute

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

The Congressional Hispanic Conference ( CHC ) is a Republican sponsored caucus in the United States Congress . Currently with 20 members, the CHC was formed in 2003, with the stated goal of promoting policy outcomes of importance to Americans of Hispanic or Lusitanic descent.

#512487

12-497: The Congressional Hispanic Leadership Institute (CHLI) is an American non-profit and non-partisan organization founded in 2003 by members of the Congressional Hispanic Conference . The 501(c)(3) organization was begun by Florida Representatives Lincoln Díaz-Balart , Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and Mario Díaz-Balart with Cuban-American congressperson Diaz-Balart as its first Chairman. The CHLI's purpose

24-732: Is funded through a partnership between CHLI and the Ford Motor Company . CHLI website Congressional Hispanic Conference The impetus behind the Conference's creation was the debate surrounding the nomination of conservative lawyer Miguel Estrada to the DC Circuit Court of Appeals and ideological differences in the Congressional Hispanic Caucus , which was predominantly populated by Democratic members of Congress. As of 2024,

36-758: Is open to non-Hispanic "associate" members who represent districts with significant Hispanic populations or generally support its goals with regards to public policy. In 2003, Conference members also formed the Congressional Hispanic Leadership Institute as an equivalent to the Democratic CHC-affiliated CHCI. In the 2006 and 2008 elections, the Conference suffered the loss of nearly half of their members to electoral defeat, attempts at higher office or resignations. Past chair Luis Fortuño left Congress after being elected Governor of Puerto Rico . After

48-691: Is to serve as an educational arm of the Conference to bring awareness, access and opportunities for Americans of Hispanic and Portuguese descent. It was formed to act as a balancing "counterweight" to the Democratic Party majority of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute . The CHLI Global Leaders Internship and Fellowship provides 15-week summer internships for undergraduates in congressional and corporate affairs offices in Washington D.C. The program

60-466: Is to serve as an educational arm of the Conference to bring awareness, access and opportunities for Americans of Hispanic and Portuguese descent. It was formed to act as a balancing "counterweight" to the Democratic Party majority of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute . The CHLI Global Leaders Internship and Fellowship provides 15-week summer internships for undergraduates in congressional and corporate affairs offices in Washington D.C. The program

72-404: The 2010 midterm elections , six new Hispanic Republicans were elected to Congress: Senator Marco Rubio of Florida, Representatives David Rivera of Florida, Raúl Labrador of Idaho , Francisco Canseco and Bill Flores of Texas, and Jaime Herrera Beutler of Washington , as well as Portuguese American Senator Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania, who was a member of the conference when he served in

84-475: The U.S. Supreme Court . The group was officially announced at a press conference two days later. They were soon joined by two more Portuguese American congressmen, Richard Pombo of California and Patrick Toomey of Pennsylvania. At its inception, the Conference supported the following: President George W. Bush and American troops in the war against terrorism; the Free Trade Agreement of

96-521: The Americas (FTAA); tax relief to families and the over two million Hispanic- and Lusitanic-owned small businesses; support for faith based initiatives ; and, educational choice for all. Like their Democratic counterpart, the Conference allows members from the Senate . Mel Martinez , the first Cuban-American U.S. Senator, joined the group shortly after his election in 2004. Additionally, the Conference

108-598: The CHC's public outreach arm, the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute , the Caucus has since been composed solely of Democratic and Democratic-caucusing independent legislators. Feeling there was "significant need" for a "new Hispanic conference" newly elected Florida congressman Mario Díaz-Balart began to organize in 2002 a caucus for Hispanic Republicans to counter what they felt was Democratic dominance over Hispanic political affairs. On March 17, 2003, Díaz-Balart revealed

120-612: The Conference has 15 members in the House and 2 members in the Senate, as well as 3 non-voting members. In the mid to late 1990s, the Republican members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus – Mexican-American Henry Bonilla of Texas and Cuban-Americans Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and Lincoln Díaz-Balart of Florida – left the Caucus in protest over its support for improved relations with Cuba . While Ros-Lehtinen remained an active member of

132-477: The House. Congressional Hispanic Leadership Institute The Congressional Hispanic Leadership Institute (CHLI) is an American non-profit and non-partisan organization founded in 2003 by members of the Congressional Hispanic Conference . The 501(c)(3) organization was begun by Florida Representatives Lincoln Díaz-Balart , Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and Mario Díaz-Balart with Cuban-American congressperson Diaz-Balart as its first Chairman. The CHLI's purpose

SECTION 10

#1732772539513

144-546: The formation of the Conference in an open letter published in The Wall Street Journal . Joined by Bonilla, Ros-Lehtinen, his brother Lincoln, and newly elected colleague Devin Nunes , a California congressman of Portuguese (Azorean) descent, Díaz-Balart decried what he perceived as Hispanic Democratic efforts to derail the nomination of Estrada, a selection seen by some at the time as a possible fast track to

#512487