In a seismic shift for U.S. civil rights history, the legacy of Cesar Chavez, long celebrated as a champion of farmworkers’ rights, is facing a national reckoning after multiple allegations of sexual abuse emerged. A recent New York Times investigation detailed accusations that Chavez sexually abused two girls—then ages 12 and 13—in the 1970s and engaged in sexual misconduct against women, including longtime colleague Dolores Huerta. Huerta, co‑founder of the United Farm Workers (UFW), publicly accused Chavez of rape and coercion in the 1960s, asserting that she stayed silent for decades to protect the movement’s cause.
These revelations have triggered swift and widespread actions across the United States. The UFW has canceled all planned events honoring Chavez, including activities tied to Cesar Chavez Day on March 31, and announced plans to open confidential avenues for survivors to come forward. Numerous municipalities and institutions are reevaluating or removing tributes to Chavez: streets bearing his name are being renamed, statues and murals are being covered or dismantled, and some celebrations have been permanently canceled. Politicians and leaders from several Latino advocacy groups have publicly supported replacing Chavez’s name with tributes to farmworkers or female leaders like Huerta.
The fallout has reached beyond local and state levels. Over 130 places across at least 19 states bear Chavez’s name—from schools and streets to libraries and even a U.S. Navy cargo ship. Some city officials and community members have expressed support for these changes as accountability, while others worry that erasing public symbols of a complicated historical figure risks diminishing the broader history of Latino civil rights and labor struggles. Debates continue about how to acknowledge both his contributions to labor organizing and the gravity of the alleged abuses. Federal sites named for Chavez, such as the César E. Chávez National Monument, would require presidential or congressional action for any formal change.
This moment marks a rare and dramatic reexamination of a once‑heralded leader’s legacy, raising complex questions about how societies commemorate influential figures whose personal conduct is called into question.

