2026 Honduras Delegation Information

02/27/2026-03/02/2026



Honduras Brief

The Partnership for Participatory International Policy (P-PIP), at the request of the Civic Council of Popular and Indigenous Organizations of Honduras (Consejo Cívico de Organizaciones Populares e Indígenas de Hondura, COPINH), will be leading a delegation of US Congresspeople to Honduras, planned to coincide with the 10th commemoration of the assassination of Berta Cáceres. 

The delegation will take place shortly after a new government is set to assume power in Honduras following the tumultuous and controversial November 2025 general elections. Despite taking place over two weeks ago, results have still not been announced and significant technical problems have undermined confidence in the democratic process and may cause further delays. Additionally, the elections faced an unprecedented amount of foreign intervention. Just days before the vote, Trump publicly announced his public support for the National Party candidate, Nasry “Tito” Asfura, and a pardon for ex-President and convicted drug trafficker, Juan Orlando Hernández, also from the National party, sentenced to 45 years in prison by a New York jury. The U.S.’s actions in Honduras came shortly before the Trump administration announced the “Trump Corollary” to the Monroe Doctrine, suggesting that Honduras may be exemplary of this new policy. Given the U.S.’s powerful influence in Central America, Trump’s communications are believed to sway voters particularly given the U.S. 's hard and threatening stance on tariffs and immigration, and close relationships with investors linked to a libertarian, private city located on the island of Roatan, called Próspera Group. 

For offices able to join the delegation early, we will visit Próspera to learn about their project and their libertarian vision at a time when the investors, empowered by Trump, seek to reinvigorate the project after losing constitutional status under the previous administration. The delegation will focus on exchanges with Honduran civil society groups impacted by US foreign policy, including the Afro-Indigenous Garifuna communities on the Atlantic coast, small farming and land rights defenders from the Aguan Valley, feminist and LGBT+ organizations in San Pedro Sula, and anti-corruption groups from Tegucigalpa. We'll have meetings with COPINH and attend a full day of commemoration activities in the town of La Esperanza. We'll end the trip with bilateral meetings with the Honduran government, providing critical opportunities to meet with the new administration. 




Required Forms


Delegation Coordinators

Elise Roberts

Founder and director of the Partnership for Participatory International Policy (P-PIP). Elise holds a BA in Sociology from Macalester College and an MSW focused on  international nonprofits from Columbia University. Elise has coordinated international  educational delegations in a variety of formats, including leading study abroad programs on five continents. Before founding P-PIP she worked for ATD Fourth World at the United Nations and Witness for Peace, where she co-founded the Honduras program and coordinated the grassroots and Congressional support for the Berta Cáceres Human Rights in Honduras Act. She has led 30  grassroots delegations focused on the effects of US policies and business practices in Latin America, including 11 Congressional delegations. 

Karen Spring

Co-coordinator of the Honduras Solidarity Network (HSN), an informal network of over 30 organizations from Canada and the U.S. Karen has lived and worked on human rights and policy issues in Honduras since 2009, working alongside Honduran grassroots communities and organizations and leading several dozen delegations to Honduras. Karen is the host of the Honduras Now podcast and is currently a PhD candidate at the University of Ottawa at the School of International Development and Global Studies.

Lulu Matute

Organizing coordinator for the School of the Americas Watch (SOAWatch). Lulu is a founding member of the board of directors for P-PIP and was part of the leadership team for P-PIP’s founding delegation to Guatemala in 2023. As an EMT-B certified Search and Rescue specialist and humanitarian aid volunteer, Lulu combines her passion for service with her academic pursuits. She holds a degree in American Studies from UC Berkeley, where her research emphasized contemporary migration from Central America and the criminalization faced by displaced communities in increasingly militarized border regions. She is a recipient of the Robert and Colleen Haas Scholars and McNair Scholar awards.



Meetings in Honduras


Traveling in Honduras


Packing List

We suggest that you pack clothes with three considerations in mind: cultural sensitivity, weather and practicality.

Cultural Sensitivity

Hondurans, including those living in extreme poverty, keep their clothes clean and well pressed. Women wear bras, men generally wear their shirts tucked in, and it is considered very informal for adults to wear shorts.

We suggest that you do not bring flashy or revealing clothing, or expensive equipment/technology that is not necessary.

Weather

It is advisable to bring a rain jacket and other rain gear that you feel you may need. It is normally quite hot during the day but it cools down at night. It is appropriate to bring a sweater or jacket. Right now (February 6, 2026), southern Honduras is experiencing unusually cold temperatures, day and night. In La Esperanza where we will visit, temperatures are as low as 55 degrees Fahrenheit. Although this is not considered cold for many from North America, remember that houses are not built with insulation and sometimes, the temperature is colder indoors than outside. In normal circumstances, expect the temperatures to range between 65 to 86 degrees Fahrenheit.

Weight Limit

We ask that you travel light. Please bring only one piece of luggage, such as a backpack, duffel bag, or suitcase, which will be checked at the airport, and one small carry-on, such as a daypack or large handbag.

Practicality

Pack any important personal items, medicines, and an extra set of clothes and shoes in your carry-on bag, just in case your luggage gets lost. Light clothes that dry quickly are particularly practical as are having a good set of walking shoes or sandals.

NOTE: As a group, we usually purchase big jugs of water to fill up our water bottles and we will have a bag of communal snacks with us in the van at all times. But plan ahead if you need it. Think about what is important to fulfill your basic essential needs and pack accordingly.



Briefing Materials

Key Policy Issues

This is an incomplete list that complements issues that we will likely hear about during our trip and read about in the recommended articles below. 

Purpose of Trip

To learn about and evaluate U.S. policy and its impacts in Honduras and more broadly, the Central American region. The trip seeks to highlight the voices and experiences of Honduran organizations and citizens that are involved in changing the structural causes of poverty and migration. Throughout the trip, delegates will learn about key U.S. policy issues and approaches, and discussions during the visit will help draw connections to the issues we learn about and how the U.S. can and has responded to them. 

Proposed U.S. Legislation and Policy in Central America

Recent past and present

Recommended Readings