New York Daily News

AOC, Velazquez in P.R. for talks on statehood

- BY DAVE GOLDINER

A congressio­nal delegation including Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) and Rep. Nydia Velazquez (D-N.Y.) jetted into Puerto Rico Thursday for talks as Congress prepares to consider a bill that could lead to a decisive vote on statehood.

The New York lawmakers will meet with political players on all sides of the explosive debate over whether the island should seek to become the 51st state, declare independen­ce or adopt a hybrid semi-independen­t status.

The issue has gained additional urgency because Democrats in the House of Representa­tives recently reached a breakthrou­gh agreement to take up a measure that would authorize a plebiscite on the issue.

“The three options that are given to the public or the people, the residents of Puerto Rico, the American citizens of Puerto Rico, are fully democratic,” Gov. Pedro Pierlusi, who backs statehood, told The Hill ahead of the delegation’s three-day visit.

The measure, not yet introduced, follows months of negotiatio­ns between federal lawmakers who have long disagreed on what Puerto Rico’s political status should be.

“Getting to this point has not been an easy process. Is it perfection? No,” said Rep. Raul Grijalva of Arizona, chairman of the U.S. House Natural Resources Committee, which oversees affairs in U.S. territorie­s.

But some powerful Republican­s, including Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) favor allowing Puerto Ricans to vote on their future status.

The issue of statehood, or estadidad in Spanish, is the biggest and most controvers­ial issue for Puerto Ricans both on the island and in the 5 million-strong diaspora on the mainland, centered in New York City, Philadelph­ia and the Orlando area.

Velazquez, the dean of the Puerto Rican caucus in the House, fiercely opposes statehood, which some advocates believe would dilute the island’s vibrant culture and reliance on the Spanish language. She and AOC had favored a convention that would determine the island’s options.

On the other hand, Rep. Ritchie Torres (R-N.Y.), whose South Bronx district includes the highest concentrat­ion of Puerto Ricans in the nation, backs statehood as the only way for the island’s approximat­ely 3 million residents to have an effective say over their governance.

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