The Standard (St. Catharines)

Voters want statehood

Experts say Republican congress unlikely to acknowledg­e Puerto Rico referendum

- DANICA COTO THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Puerto Rico’s governor is vowing to make the U.S. territory the 51st state after statehood won in a non-binding referendum hit by a boycott and low turnout that raised questions about the vote’s legitimacy.

Gov. Ricardo Rossello told a couple hundred supporters waving U.S. flags late Sunday that he will soon create a commission to appoint two senators and five representa­tives to demand statehood from the U.S. Congress, which has to approve any changes to the island’s political status.

“The United States of America will have to obey the will of our people!” Rossello yelled to a crowd clutching U.S. flags and dancing to a tropical jingle that promoted statehood.

But experts say it is highly unlikely a Republican-controlled Congress would acknowledg­e Sunday’s results, let alone accept them because Puerto Rico tends to favour Democrats.

The referendum has sparked dozens of memes that turned viral, including some showing the tropical island covered in snow.

More than half a million people voted for statehood during Sunday’s referendum, followed by nearly 7,800 votes for free associatio­n/independen­ce and more than 6,800 votes for the current territoria­l status. Voter turnout was just 23 per cent.

It was the lowest level of participat­ion in any election in Puerto Rico since 1967, noted Carlos Vargas Ramos, an associate with the Center for Puerto Rican Studies at Hunter College in New York. He said that even among voters who supported statehood, turnout was lower this year compared with the previous referendum in 2012.

“Supporters of statehood did not seem enthusiast­ic about this plebiscite as they were five years ago,” he said.

Rossello brushed aside those concerns, noting that the referendum was a democratic process in which the majority prevailed as he questioned why more people did not come out to defend alternativ­es to statehood.

He also said that participat­ion rates varied from seven per cent to 35 per cent for states including Wisconsin and Hawaii when they were ratified as states.

Three of Puerto Rico’s political parties, including the main opposition party, had called on their supporters to boycott the referendum, which they labelled a failure.

Former Gov. Alejandro Garcia Padilla, who did not seek re-election last year and whose party supports the status quo, rejected Sunday’s results.

“Whoever claims that statehood triumphed is being intellectu­ally dishonest,” he said. “The boycott defeated statehood.”

The referendum coincided with the 100th anniversar­y of the U.S. granting citizenshi­p to Puerto Ricans, though they are barred from voting in presidenti­al elections and have only one congressio­nal representa­tive with limited voting powers.

Many believe the island’s territoria­l status has contribute­d to its economic crisis, largely caused by decades of heavy borrowing and the eliminatio­n of federal tax incentives.

Puerto Rico is exempt from the U.S. federal income tax, but it still pays Social Security and Medicare and local taxes and receives less federal funding than U.S. states.

“We have been a colony for 500 years, and we have had U.S. citizenshi­p for 100 years, but it’s been a second class one,” Rossello said.

Nearly half a million Puerto Ricans have fled to the U.S. mainland to escape the island’s 10-year economic recession and 12 per cent unemployme­nt rate.

Those who remain behind have faced new taxes and higher utility bills on an island where food is 22 per cent more expensive than the U.S. mainland and public services are 64 per cent more expensive.

Jose Rosa, a 62-year-old retired correction­s officer, said the island’s situation is the reason he voted for the first time in such a referendum, the fifth on Puerto Rico’s status.

“We need a change in the way we’re living,” he said. “You can see the crisis.”

No clear majority emerged in the first three referendum­s on status, with voters almost evenly divided between statehood and the status quo.

During the last referendum in 2012, 54 per cent said they wanted a status change. Sixty-one per cent who answered a second question said they favoured statehood, but nearly half a million voters left that question blank, leading many to claim the results weren’t legitimate.

The results of the newest referendum could lead to similar claims, Vargas said.

“Whether those results are legitimate or not depends on the audience that may be receiving (them),” he said. “If the advocates for statehood for Puerto Rico want to address the results to the U.S. Congress ... then the results may appear weak, particular­ly when five years ago 834,000 voters supported statehood for the island. If the audience is the electorate in Puerto Rico, well, they spoke louder by their overwhelmi­ng abstention.”

 ?? CARLOS GIUSTI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rossello, centre, celebrates the results of a referendum on the status of the island, next to the congresswo­man representi­ng Puerto Rico Jennifer Gonzalez, left, in San Juan, Puerto Rico, on Sunday.
CARLOS GIUSTI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rossello, centre, celebrates the results of a referendum on the status of the island, next to the congresswo­man representi­ng Puerto Rico Jennifer Gonzalez, left, in San Juan, Puerto Rico, on Sunday.

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