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Latina leaders gather at Cal State LA to rethink the Bill of Rights for modern America

March 11, 2026
Panel of women leaders posing on stage at Cal State LA during “A Bill of Rights for Our Future” event.
Photo: Celebrants at the 35th Annual Latina History Day VIP Salon at Cal State LA's University-Student Union Theatre included, from left, Hispanas Organized for Political Equality CEO Helen Torres, Telemundo host Silvana Effio, California State University Trustee Yammilette Rodriguez, Cal State LA Professor Gabrielle Clark, Unseen Founder Sonja Diaz, and Immigrant Legal Resource Center Senior Managing Attorney Grisel Ruiz. (Credit: Jordan Renville/Cal State LA)

Latina leaders gather at Cal State LA to rethink the Bill of Rights for modern America

March 11, 2026
Panel of women leaders posing on stage at Cal State LA during “A Bill of Rights for Our Future” event.
Photo: Celebrants at the 35th Annual Latina History Day VIP Salon at Cal State LA's University-Student Union Theatre included, from left, Hispanas Organized for Political Equality CEO Helen Torres, Telemundo host Silvana Effio, California State University Trustee Yammilette Rodriguez, Cal State LA Professor Gabrielle Clark, Unseen Founder Sonja Diaz, and Immigrant Legal Resource Center Senior Managing Attorney Grisel Ruiz. (Credit: Jordan Renville/Cal State LA)

As the United State approaches the 250th anniversary of its founding on July 4, Hispanas Organized for Political Equality (HOPE) is reimagining the Bill of Rights.

The nonprofit, which is led by and advocates for Latinas, is examining the first 10 amendments of the U.S. Constitution and asking how they can be supplemented in a country that is much more diverse than the one known by the Founding Fathers.

HOPE tasked a diverse group of Latinas to view the Bill of Rights through a 21st-century lens and produce 11—not 10—amendments that would address key issues the nation faces in the present day.

On Thursday, March 5, Cal State LA hosted HOPE for the 35th Annual Latina History Day VIP Salon at the University-Student Union Theatre and provided the nonprofit with a platform to soft launch its upcoming multidisciplinary art project, “A Bill of Rights for Our Future.”

“Latinas weren’t at the table at that time, but we are today,” said HOPE Chief Executive Officer Helen Torres. “That was the genesis for the idea of ‘A Bill of Rights for Our Future.’ It’s really centered on the concept of what our community needs today. We are building on the rights that are currently there but thinking futuristically, and asking, how do we protect those rights?”

The event at Cal State LA highlighted the university’s strong ties with HOPE. More than 200 Cal State LA students and distinguished thought leaders from around Los Angeles attended “The Future We Claim: Leadership and a Bill of Rights for Our Future” salon.

“At Cal State LA, we have many first-generation students,” said President Berenecea Johnson Eanes in her welcoming remarks. “Many are working while earning their degrees. Many are the first in their families to step into spaces like this. This room is filled with women who look [like them]. That’s why it’s important for us to do this. We are proud to host you tonight. This is your home. We are proud to be your partner; we are proud to be the university that serves as the civic home for these conversations.”

HOPE is a nonpartisan organization committed to ensuring political and economic parity for Latinas through leadership, advocacy, and education to benefit all communities and the status of women. Its programs and educational events are open to all individuals who support Latina leadership to strengthen democracy and advance economic mobility.

More than 350 Cal State LA alumni, including Associate Vice President for University Advancement Luisa Acosta, are proud members of HOPE.

“Tonight, I see the intersection of access and advocacy, education and empowerment, opportunity and responsibility, and I am simply grateful as an alum and as a HOPE sister to witness two powerful forces come together,” Acosta said. “When education and leadership development align, when access means advocacy, when we invest in women who invest in others, we don’t just host events, we build legacies.”

The salon featured an esteemed panel that included Gabrielle Clark, Cal State LA professor of political science; Sonja Diaz, civil rights attorney and founder of Unseen; and Grisel Ruiz, senior managing attorney with the Immigrant Legal Resource Center. Telemundo host Silvana Effio served as the moderator.

Much of the discussion centered around how to preserve individual rights. The panelists provided hope, pointing out that progress over the United States’ 250 years has not come in a straight, continuous line.

“We’re moving away from established rights for women, marginalized communities, immigrants, etc.,” Clark said. “So, what can students take from this? The Constitution is vague and indeterminate. That can be good and bad, so keep investing in the good. While the moment right now is not the most propitious for realizing a particular goal, your time will come again. I want to have hope that the pendulum will swing and students, as they invest in their ideas for social progress, will be vindicated. I see it every day in my classroom at Cal State LA.”

Said Diaz: “What gives me hope is the anger, the rage, the engagement. It’s the way that people are opening their eyes and getting activated. It’s the youth who are staging walkouts in their schools. All of that is what truly gives me hope.”

Ruiz and Diaz were two of the participants in the “A Bill of Rights for Our Future” art project, which will officially launch online in April. Over several months in 2025, they looked to build upon the original amendments’ enduring principles by offering bold proposals that reaffirm their original promises while extending their vision for the future.

Diaz explored the right to universal health care, while Ruiz tackled the right to thrive as a human being. The other topics covered in the project are real opportunity, food, equal education, equal pay, equitable infrastructure, the pursuit of economic opportunity, financial independence, compensation for digital labor and data, and full and meaningful participation.

“The project revolves around these Latina voices, but it’s designed to have everyone be engaged,” Torres said. “The Bill of Rights is strong. Those rights need to be protected and defended, but our project explores what needs to be added to them, knowing what we know today with the experiences that we have today.”

The salon, which was co-sponsored by the Public Relations Student Society of America, was preceded by a reception at the University Club.

“We are here to celebrate who we are, our culture, our experiences,” said California State University (CSU) Trustee and HOPE  member Yammilette Rodriguez. “Being at Cal State LA is so meaningful. So many women have earned their degrees from the CSU. We’ve empowered them through their CSU education, and now they make sure communities across the state are lifted up.”

Cal State LA President stands with students in front of colorful Los Angeles backdrop at campus leadership event.
Photo: Cal State LA President Berenecea Johnson Eanes meets with VIP guests during the reception at the University Club preceding the 35th Annual Latina History Day VIP Salon on Thursday, March 5. (Credit: Jordan Renville/Cal State LA)

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California State University, Los Angeles is the premier comprehensive public university in the heart of Los Angeles. Cal State LA is ranked number one in the United States for the upward mobility of its students. Cal State LA is dedicated to engagement, service, and the public good, offering nationally recognized programs in science, the arts, business, criminal justice, engineering, nursing, education, and the humanities. Founded in 1947, the University serves more than 22,000 students and has more than 260,000 distinguished alumni.