A leading Latino political organization is launching its first-ever incumbent protection campaign, designed to prop up five Hispanic representatives who flipped formerly Republican districts.



The Latino Victory Fund (LVF), which played an important role in fundraising and promoting the members in 2018, launched Wednesday the "Our Champions" campaign to protect the seats held by Democratic Reps. Gil Cisneros Gilbert (Gil) Ray CisnerosMORE (Calif.), Mike Levin (Calif.), Debbie Mucarsel-Powell Debbie Mucarsel-PowellDisinformation, QAnon efforts targeting Latino voters ramp up ahead of presidential election Florida Democrat asks FBI to investigate anti-Semitic, racist disinformation Hispanic Caucus members embark on 'virtual bus tour' with Biden campaign MORE (Fla.), Xochitl Torres Small (N.M.) and Antonio DelgadoAntonio Ramon DelgadoGOP leader says he doesn't want Chamber's endorsement: 'They have sold out' US Chamber of Commerce set to endorse 23 House freshman Democrats Democrats go big on diversity with new House recruits MORE (N.Y.).

Mayra Macías, executive director of the Latino Victory Fund, called the five lawmakers "our community’s voice in Washington."



"Now more than ever, we need their diverse backgrounds and perspectives in the halls of Congress. That is why Latino Victory Fund is fully committed to making sure we do everything in our power to help re-elect them and to protect and expand the Democratic majority in 2020," she added.

All five representatives won tough elections in 2018, taking over districts previously held by Republicans.

Cisneros and Levin won traditionally Republican Southern California seats after two top-tier GOP retirements; Mucarsel-Powell unseated former Rep. Carlos Curbelo Carlos Luis CurbeloGOP wants more vision, policy from Trump at convention Mucarsel-Powell, Giménez to battle for Florida swing district The Memo: GOP cringes at new Trump race controversy MORE (R-Fla.); Torres Small won a tight race; and Delgado won an upstate New York district.



A majority of Hispanic members represent heavily-Democratic districts, and the group's growth has in large part followed demographic trends around major urban areas.



But Hispanic representation has grown throughout the country, albeit modestly, including in districts with smaller Hispanic populations.



Delgado, the only member on the LVF list who's not a member of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus (CHC), represents a Republican-leaning district that's 82 percent white and only 8 percent Hispanic.



Macías said the campaign is designed to become "a cyclical incumbent protection program and part of Latino Victory’s overall strategy to ensure we keep growing Latino political power at all levels of government.”