Top 50 Republican Latinos
- Ted Cruz
— A Cuban-American, Cruz is the firebrand junior senator from Texas,
which has the second largest Latino population of any state. He served
in President George W. Bush’s Justice Department and made his own run
for the Oval Office in 2016. While Cruz’s presidential bid was cut
short, he was Donald Trump’s fiercest competition in the Republican
primary.
- Marco Rubio
— Florida, where Rubio is the junior senator, has the third largest
Latino population of any state. The West Miami native’s fast political
ascent began as a city commissioner in 1998 and crested in 2011 when he
was elected to the U.S. Senate. He ran unsuccessfully for president in
2016 but was re-elected to his second term as senator. This son of
Cuban immigrants is still one of the youngest senators with plenty of
politics ahead of him.
- Ileana Ros-Lehtinen
— Born in Cuba, Ros-Lehtinen is the first Latina ever to be elected to
Congress. She was also the first Republican woman elected to the House
from Florida. She represents Florida’s 27th District. Ros-Lehtinen
serves as the chair emeritus of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs
and chairs the Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on the Middle East and North
Africa and serves on the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence,
all committees that may figure prominently during the Trump
administration.
- Susana Martinez
— She is not only the first Latina governor in the U.S., but Martinez,
from New Mexico, serves as chairwoman of the Republican Governors
Association. Martinez, who is of Mexican descent, was named “Woman of
the Year” by Hispanic Business Magazine for her efforts in reducing
taxes and making her state more business friendly. Prior to becoming
governor, Martinez was an effective district attorney of the 3rd
Judicial District of Doña Ana County for 25 years.
- Brian Sandoval
— Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval, who is of Mexican heritage, was the first
Hispanic candidate elected to statewide office in the Silver State.
Previously, he served as an attorney general and a judge on the U.S.
District Court for Nevada. Sandoval has expressed skepticism regarding
President Trump’s initiative to build a wall along the southern U.S.
border, and it will be an interesting issue on which to watch him as the
popular Republican governor was considered a potential GOP presidential
candidate in 2016. Sandoval’s second and final term as Nevada’s
governor expires in 2018.
- Lincoln Díaz-Balart
— The older brother of U.S. Rep. Mario Díaz-Balart, Lincoln served in
the House as well, representing Florida’s 21st District from 1993 until
his retirement in 2011. In 1994, Lincoln Diaz-Balart became the first
Hispanic assigned to the Rules Committee. He currently serves as
chairman of the Congressional Hispanic Leadership Institute.
- Mario Díaz-Balart
— Born to Cuban immigrants in nearby Fort Lauderdale, Díaz-Balart
represents Florida’s 25th District, which includes much of southwestern
Miami-Dade County. He is currently serving his eighth term in the U.S.
House of Representatives. Before being elected to Congress in 2002 he
served an equally long time in Florida’s House and Senate.
- Ana Navarro
— The Nicaraguan-born Navarro arrived in America as a child with her
family in political exile; she became an American under amnesty granted
by then-President Ronald Reagan. She is a Republican political
strategist and commentator on CNN and several other networks. Her
profile and influence has risen considerably from her staunch opposition
to Donald Trump, going so far as to cast her ballot for Hillary
Clinton. She continues to be President Trump's biggest Republican
critic.
- George P. Bush
— Son of former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, George P. Bush serves as the
land commissioner in his native state of Texas. His mother, Columba
Bush, is originally from Mexico, but is now a U.S. citizen. For the sake
of party unity, he endorsed Republican candidate Donald Trump, the only
Bush to publicly do so, although he admitted it was "a bitter pill,"
given the things Trump said about his family. Bush is also active in
the Navy reserves and Hispanic Republicans of Texas, the latter of which
works to promote outreach to Hispanic voters in the state.
- Bill Flores
— Ninth-generation Texan Flores’ Spanish ancestors settled in what was
then the country’s territory of Mexico in 1725. He represents Texas’
17th District in Congress. In the four general elections Flores has ran,
he garnered no less than 60 percent of the votes. During his third
term, he chaired the Republican Study Committee, a conservative caucus
of House Republicans. Currently, Flores sits on the House Energy and
Commerce Committee and the board of directors of the Congressional
Hispanic Leadership Institute.
- Raúl Labrador
— Born in Puerto Rico, Labrador moved stateside to Las Vegas with his
mother when he was teenager. Now, he represents the congressional 1st
District of Idaho. He introduced the First Amendment Defense Act, which
was aimed at protecting those who opposed same-sex marriage based on
religious beliefs. He previously served in the Idaho House of
Representatives. His newest initiative is a constitutional amendment to
create congressional term limits of 12 years, which will be a real test
of his influence.
- Linda Chavez —
A prominent figure in Republican politics since her stint as White
House director of public liaison during the Reagan administration,
Chavez was honored as a Living Legend by the Library of Congress in
April 2000. A year later, she was the first Latina nominated for a
Cabinet appointment — under President George W. Bush for secretary of
Labor. As a writer, syndicated columnist, nonprofit founder, and Newsmax Insider, she has mined her decades of experience to advance Republican policy concerns.
- Carlos Curbelo
— U.S. Rep. Carlos Curbelo, a son of Cuban exiles, represents Florida’s
26th District. He stands out among his peers as one of few Republicans
willing to work with Democrats on climate change legislation; Curbelo
has also shown a special interest in environmental issues related to the
lionfish invasion of Florida’s coastal waters. He previously served as a
member of the Miami-Dade County Public Schools Board; and before public
service, Curbelo was a small-business owner and philanthropist in
Miami.
- Alex Mooney
— Representing West Virginia’s 2nd District, Mooney is the first
Hispanic elected to Congress from West Virginia. Mooney first ran for
public office for the New Hampshire House of Representatives while
attending Dartmouth College; a few years later he would be elected to
the Maryland Senate. He served two terms as a state senator before
moving to West Virginia and winning a seat in the state House in 2014.
Mooney has said his mother, a Cuban refugee that escaped imprisonment,
and his father, a Vietnam veteran, inspires his American values.
- John Sanchez
— The great, great grandson of a 19th-century territorial legislator
before New Mexico became a state, Sanchez is the state's 29th lieutenant
governor. In 2018, New Mexico will elect a new governor, and Sanchez's
name has been mentioned as the Republican frontrunner. He ran for
governor previously, in 2002, losing in the general election to Democrat
Bill Richardson.
- Carlos López-Cantera —
Born prematurely while his Cuban refugee parents vacationed in Madrid,
Spain, Florida Lt. Gov. Carlos López-Cantera grew up in Miami. Before
Gov. Rick Scott appointed him to that position, he was previously the
property appraiser of Miami-Dade County as well as a four-term state
representative. López-Cantera ran for U.S. Senate in 2016, but withdrew
when Sen. Marco Rubio dropped his presidential bid and entered the race
to retain his seat. @LopezCantera
- Evelyn Sanguinetti —
Sanguinetti was born to a Cuban mother and Ecuadorian father in Miami,
Florida, and speaks Spanish as her first language. She is the first
Hispanic to be elected lieutenant governor in Illinois and the
first-ever Latina lieutenant governor in the U.S.
- Helen Aguirre-Ferré —
Of Nicaraguan descent, Aguirre-Ferré was the GOP’s Hispanic
Communications director before she was named special assistant to
President Trump and the White House director of Media Affairs. She was
previously a senior adviser to 2016 Republican presidential candidate
Jeb Bush and an op-ed columnist for The Miami Herald. Upon her White
House appointment, Politico called her "one of South Florida’s most
respected Spanish-language media figures."
- Daniel Garza —
Born to Mexican parents in California, Garza is executive director of
the LIBRE Initiative, an organization that promotes conservative values
to the Hispanic community. He also serves on the board of The Harvard
Journal of Hispanic Policy.
- Samuel Rodriguez —
Born to Puerto Rican parents, Rodriguez is an evangelical pastor and
the founder and president of the National Hispanic Christian Leadership
Conference, which is comprised of more than 40,000 Latino member
churches. He also serves on the board of directors for the National
Association of Evangelicals.
- Hector Barreto
— As chairman of The Latino Coalition, one of the nation’s largest
Latino advocacy groups, and president of the Hispanic Business
Roundtable Institute, Barreto was inducted into the Minority Business
Hall of Fame. He previously served as the head of the Small Business
Administration under former President George W. Bush.
- Jaime Herrera Beutler
— She represents Washington’s congressional 3rd District and happens to
be the third youngest woman serving in Congress. Of Mexican descent
because of her father, she is the first Hispanic in history to represent
the state of Washington in Congress. Herrera Beutler served in the
Washington state House of Representatives prior to being elected to
D.C.
- Al Cardenas —
The Cuban-born Cardenas is a highly regarded American lawyer and
lobbyist and is often referred to as a kingmaker. The former chairman of
the Republican Party of Florida, he became the first Hispanic to lead a
major state party; and he remains the last Hispanic to chair the
Florida GOP. Cardenas was appointed to multiple roles in both Reagan's
and Bush's administrations. A longtime friend of Jeb Bush, he was one of
his most vocal supporters and an adviser and fundraiser for his
presidential campaign in 2016.
- Alex Castellanos —
A Cuban-American, Castellanos is a Republican political consultant who
has worked on the media campaigns of presidential candidates Bob Dole,
George W. Bush, Mitt Romney, and Jeb Bush. GQ called him one of the most
cutthroat strategists in politics, and he has been dubbed "the father
of the attack ad." Castellanos has also been credited with coining the
term "soccer mom." He is the co-founder of Purple Strategies, a
bipartisan public affairs agency he formed with lawyer and Democratic
consultant Steve McMahon. Castellanos frequently appears on "Meet the
Press" and CNN.
- Alberto Gonzales —
President George W. Bush's Attorney General Alberto Gonzales was the
highest-ranking Hispanic to ever serve in the executive branch to date
and the first Latino to serve as the White House Counsel. Prior to his
appointment to U.S. attorney general, he was a justice on the Texas
Supreme Court. Gonzalez is now the dean of law at Belmont University.
Special: Is America at the Breaking Point?
- Bettina Inclán —
She was the RNC’s first national director of Hispanic Outreach. Inclán
began the National Republican Congressional Commission's Project Grow,
aimed at increasing participation and representation of women in office
as well as improving the party's communication with women voters. Now,
Inclán is a political commentator who has appeared on several networks,
and she has been recognized as someone to follow on Twitter.
- Tomás Pedro Regalado —
Born in Havana, Cuba, in 1947, Regalado was brought to America through
Operation Peter Pan, which pulled children out of the Communist regime
in the early '60s. Prior to entering politics, he built an inspiring
career as a journalist that took around the world and nearly into outer
space. He was the first Cuban-American to join the White House Press
Corps. In the 2009, Regalado was elected the mayor of Miami, Florida,
garnering 72 percent of the vote; he was re-elected with 78 percent of
the vote.
- Roger Noriega —
Of Mexican heritage, Noriega was born in Wichita, Kansas. Currently, he
is a visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, where he
coordinates the Institute's Latin America policy. Noriega served as
assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere Affairs under
President George W. Bush.
- Mario H. Lopez
— A strong voice for Latino interests and Republican ideals, Lopez is
the president of the Hispanic Leadership Fund, "a nonpartisan advocacy
organization dedicated to strengthening working families by promoting
common-sense public policy solutions that foster individual liberty,
opportunity, and prosperity, and the first center-right, nonpartisan
national Latino advocacy organization governed exclusively by Latino
political and public policy professionals. " He's currently a member of
the U.S. Senate Republican Task Force of Hispanic Affairs and the former
executive director of the U.S. House of Representatives Congressional
Hispanic Conference. Lopez is frequently asked to weigh in on current
affairs across all every media platform — in English and Spanish.
- Manuel A. Rosales
— Before becoming a fixture of Latino politics in D.C., Rosales was a
respected member of the banking and finance community in California,
culminating in a chairmanship of the California Hispanic Chamber of
Commerce; he would then be twice elected to head the U.S. chamber.
Today, he chairs the Latino National Republican Coalition and sits on
the board of directors at The Latino Coalition.
- Anitere Flores —
Serving in the Florida state Senate since 2010, Flores is the first
female Hispanic to have served in both the state Senate and House of
Representatives since 1986. She passed legislation that created a
scholarship for kids who were first in their family to attend college.
As the president pro tempore, she is the second-highest ranking state
senator in Florida.
- Pete Lopez —
Born in Miami, Florida, Lopez's family moved to his mother's home state
of New York shortly after his birth. He represents the 102nd District
in the New York state Assembly. He began his political career as the
village trustee of Schoharie at age 21 and then served in a number of
legislative offices before winning the position of Schoharie county
clerk prior to Assembly seat.
- Jessie Rodriguez
— Born in El Salvador, Rodriguez became the first Hispanic immigrant in
Wisconsin history to be elected to the state Legislature. She
previously served as outreach coordinator for Hispanics for School
Choice.
- Sean Reyes —
Of Filipino, Spanish, Japanese, and Native Hawaiian descent, Reyes is
considered to be the first ethnic minority to hold statewide office in
Utah. In 2016, he was re-elected to a full term as the state's attorney
general after his 2013 appointment by Gov. Gary Herbert. Reyes has been
recognized nationally on several occasions, including an appointment by
President George W. Bush and Congress to a commission by which he
conducted public hearings throughout the country to advise the president
and Congress on Latino issues, including a National Museum of the
American Latino.
- Carlos Perez
— A Cuban-American entrepreneur, who served as an adviser to President
Ronald Reagan and Congressman Jack Kemp, currently hosts a one-hour
radio talk show on Saturdays, which broadcasts in the Miami area. The
show, Citizens for Democracy, defends democracy in Cuba and the
Americas.
- Zeus Rodriguez
— He is the founder of Hispanics for School Choice and former president
of St. Anthony School in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, the nation’s largest
K-12 Catholic school. He is currently president of Education
Matters–Latino, specializing in education reform and Latino community
development.
- Jennifer Sevilla Korn —
She is currently the special assistant to the president and deputy
director of the Office of Public Liaison. Prior to that role, Korn was
the deputy political director and national field director for Hispanic
Initiatives at the RNC, the executive director of the Hispanic
Leadership Network, and President George W. Bush's White House director
of Hispanic and Women's Affairs.
- Alexander Acosta —
President Donald Trump’s nominee for Secretary of Labor Alexander
Acosta has a long history of upholding labor law, as an educator and a
dean, an attorney, and a member of the National Labor Relations Board
under President George W. Bush.
- Jason Mattera —
The best-selling author of three books exposing liberal hypocracy is
also an Emmy-nominated journalist for his dogged reporting on Crime
Watch Daily. Of Italian and Puerto Rican ancestry, Mattera has garnered
more than 21,000 followers on Twitter and nearly 8,000 YouTube
subscribers.
- Miguel Diaz de la Portilla — Former Republican Florida state Sen. Miguel Diaz de la Portilla represented the mostly Democratic 37th
District from 2012 to 2016. During his last year in office, the state
senator was lauded by the American Psychiatric Association for his
legislative efforts to improve mental health services in the criminal
justice system. But, he was vilified by the National Rifle Association
for killing open-carry and campus-carry bills in committee.
- Marilinda Garcia —
At 23, Garcia won a seat in the New Hampshire House of Representatives
in 2006, and she was re-elected for three more terms.. The RNC
recognized her a “rising star” in 2013. Now, she is the national
spokesperson for the LIBRE Initiative.
- Leslie Sanchez —The
former executive director for the White House Initiative on Educational
Excellence for Hispanic Americans under President George W. Bush,
Sanchez is one of a few Hispanic political analysts on major news
networks, providing election coverage for CNN and BBC. As a writer,
consultant, and market researcher, she’s helped corporate and government
groups connect with female and Latino audiences. Sanchez also appeared
on “The Apprentice: Martha Stewart,” outlasting most of her competitors
and making her a household name.
- Andy Garcia
— The Havana-born actor is a well-known conservative that gave vocal
support to Mitt Romney in 2012, despite the candidate’s poor showing
with Hispanic voters. Garcia has starred in several blockbuster movies,
but he has also made many movies as an actor, director, and producer
that allowed him to explore and share his Cuban and Latin American
heritage. A particularly favorite theme of his work is pre-Castro Cuba
as he was born shortly before the Communist takeover and only knew the
country under the dictatorship, which Garcia has frequently criticized
after his family’s exile.
- Tony Suarez —
This Norfolk, Virginia, pastor serves as the executive vice president
of the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference, the largest of
its kind. Suarez hosts his own evangelical program and is often a guest
on several cable news shows.
- Anselmo Villarreal
— The Aramark corporation honored and awarded Villarreal for his
community leadership and advocacy; Villarreal is president and CEO of La
Casa de Esperanza, Inc., a Hispanic community outreach organization in
Waukesha, Wisconsin, in Paul Ryan’s district. La Casa received a $40,000
grant with this recognition. He is also a former member of the Consumer
Advisory Council of the Federal Reserve Board.
- Alfonso Aguilar
— When the Homeland Security Act divided the functions of the
Immigration and Naturalization Services into three distinct offices,
President George W. Bush appointed Aguilar as the first chief of the
U.S. Office of Citizenship and Immigration Services, which was tasked
with processing benefit applications. During his tenure there, he led a
revamp of the naturalization test. Aguilar’s personal and professional
ambition has been to help immigrants integrate into America, and he has
been called “the conservative voice of immigration reform. While
initially a Hispanic surrogate for the Trump campaign, Aguilar pulled
his support two months ahead of the election as the candidate took an
increasingly hardline approach to immigration.
- Ed Lopez-Reyes
— In 1998, the 23-year-old, Puerto Rico-born Lopez-Reyes ran as the
Republican nominee for Rhode Island’s secretary of state. He served at
the Joint Intelligence Operations Center Europe Analytic Center in the
wake of the Sept. 11 terror attacks. He was a member of the national
leadership committee at Young Conservatives for the Freedom to Marry.
Lopez-Reyes is also the former national vice chairman of the Republican
Liberty Caucus. Currently, he runs the consulting firm Wolf and King
Strategies and his writes published articles on public policy and
popular music.
- Rachel Campos-Duffy
— A conservative voice of her generation, Campos-Duffy has been
appearing on television since her debut on the third season of MTV’s
“The Real World.” She has appeared as a guest hostess on “The View” and
as a regular panelist on “Outnumbered” and several other Fox News
programs as a contributor. She has a master’s degree in international
affairs and is a spokeswoman for the The LIBRE Initiative. Campos-Duffy
met her husband, Republican Wisconsin Rep. Sean Duffy — another “Real
World” alum — on MTV’s “Road Rules”; they married in 1999 and have eight
children together.
- Rosario Marin
— Born in Mexico, Marin is a former U.S. Treasurer under President
George W. Bush; she wrote a book about her experience titled "Leading
Between Two Worlds: Lessons from the First Mexican-Born Treasurer of the
United States." She took Donald Trump’s campaign language regarding
Mexicans as a personal insult, and vowed to neither vote nor endorse his
candidacy for president.
- Massey Villarreal —
President and CEO of Precision Task Group, Inc., Villarreal was named
by Hispanic Business Magazine as one of the 100 most influential
Hispanics in 2002. After Donald Trump’s tough talk on immigration he
delivered in Phoenix in September 2016, Villarreal became one of the
candidate’s staunchest critics, but ultimately voted for him anyway.
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