Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Tens of thousands demand governor resign

- By Dánica Coto

SAN JUAN, PUERTO RICO >> Waving flags, chanting and banging pots and pans, tens of thousands of Puerto Ricans filled a central highway Monday to demand the resignatio­n of Gov. Ricardo Rosselló in what appeared to be the biggest protest on the island in nearly two decades.

The demonstrat­ion came 10 days after the leak of 889 pages of obscenity-laced online chats between Rosselló and some of his close advisers. In the conversati­ons, they insulted women and mocked constituen­ts, including victims of Hurricane Maria.

The leak has intensifie­d long-smoldering anger in the U.S. territory over persistent corruption and mismanagem­ent by the island’s two main political parties, a severe debt crisis, a sickly economy and a slow recovery from Maria, which devastated Puerto Rico in September 2017.

“The people have awakened after so much outrage,” said 69-year-old retired nurse Benedicta Villegas. “There are still people without roofs and highways without lights. The chat was the tip of the iceberg.”

Jannice Rivera, a 43-yearold mechanical engineer who lives in Houston but was born and raised in Puerto Rico and flew in solely to join the protest, said: “This is just the beginning. Finally, the government’s mask has fallen.”

The crowd surged along the American Expressway despite the punishing heat — toddlers, teenagers, profession­als and the elderly, all dripping in sweat and smiling as they waved Puerto Rico flags large and small and hoisted signs.

One group dragged a portable karaoke machine and chanted, “Ricky, resign!”

“This is to show that the people respect themselves,” said Ana Carrasquil­lo, 26. “We’ve put up with corruption for so many years.”

Rosselló, a Democrat, announced Sunday evening that he would not quit, but sought to calm the unrest by promising not to seek re-election in 2020 or continue as head of his pro-statehood political party. That only further angered his critics, who have mounted street demonstrat­ions for more than a week.

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