[1] The party held a position of advocating for the rights of Chaldeans in the emerging government of Iraq following the U.S. invasion, albeit in the form of declaring them a distinct ethnicity from Assyrians.
On August 31, 2017, on the ankawa.com website, the party released a criticism of a speech by Cardinal Louis Raphael I Sako, accusing him of interfering the Chaldean Catholic Church with their political matters.
"[10] The Chaldean National Congress is largely considered inactive in the realm of modern politics in Iraq, especially regarding Iraqi Assyrians, owing to its lack of electoral history since the 2013 Kurdish election.
In 2023, the party denounced the revocation of Louis Raphaël I Sako's decree, calling on then Iraqi president Abdul Latif Rashid to reverse his decision.
[12] In 2024, following the revocation of minority seats in the Kurdish parliament, the party boycotted that year's Kurdistan Region parliamentary election, calling the ruling an "attack on coexistence and a violation of the constitution.
[14] The alliance, however, received criticism and dismay by members of the Assyrian community, mostly due to the lack of support of parties that signed on to the coalition and their inactivity.