$\DeclareMathOperator\GL{GL}$If $G$ is a simple Lie group, and $\rho: G \to \GL(V)$ is a representation, then by Schur's lemma, the group of automorphisms of $\rho$ is a reductive subgroup of $\GL(V)$. I'm wondering whether this generalizes to the case where $\GL(V)$ is replaced by an arbitrary reductive group?
More generally: if $G$ is a semisimple algebraic group (or even reductive), $H$ is a reductive algebraic group, and $\rho : G \to H$ is a homomorphism, is the centralizer of the image of $\rho$ in $H$, $C_{H}(\rho(G))$, a reductive subgroup of $H$?
Edits:
The case I'm most interested is when the field is $\mathbb{C}$, but I would be interested in hearing about other cases as well.
As pointed out in the comments, in the case $G = H$, the centralizer is the centre, which is reductive but not necessarily connected. So the centralizer may not be connected in the general case as well.