The Day

Scandal puts Puerto Rico’s governor in crisis

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San Juan, Puerto Rico (AP)— Nearly two years ago, Hurricane María exposed the raw dysfunctio­n of Puerto Rico, collapsing long-neglected infrastruc­ture and leaving several thousand dead on Gov. Ricardo Rosselló's watch. Last week, two of his top former officials were arrested by the FBI on corruption charges.

But the scandal that is threatenin­g to buckle the boyish 40-year-old governor centers on a profanity-laced and at times misogynist­ic online chat with nine other male members of his administra­tion in which some of the U.S. territory's most powerful men act like a bunch of teenagers. The leak of at least 889 pages of the private chat has sunk Rosselló into the deepest crisis of his career.

In the chats on the encrypted messaging app Telegram, Rosselló calls one New York female politician of Puerto Rican background a “whore,” describes another as a “daughter of a bitch” and makes fun of an obese man he posed with in a photo. The chat also contains vulgar references to Puerto Rican star Ricky Martin's homosexual­ity and a series of emojis of a raised middle finger directed at a federal control board overseeing the island's finances.

For many Puerto Ricans still recovering from one of the United States' worst-ever disasters, on the back of the island's biggest public financial collapse, the scandal analysts and ordinary people are calling “Chatgate” or “Rickyleaks” has proven to be too much.

Thousands of protesters marched in the capital for a third day Monday to call for Rosselló's resignatio­n. Police tried to disperse the marchers with pepper spray in front of the Fortaleza governor's residence, which was protected by barricades.

The leaders of the U.S. territory's house and senate said they weren't planning impeachmen­t proceeding­s, but an influentia­l associatio­n of mayors from Rosselló's pro-statehood party said he had lost their support. Puerto Rican artists Benito A. Martínez Ocasio, known as Bad Bunny, and René Pérez, known as Residente, both said on Twitter they planned to return to Puerto Rico to join the protests. Playwright Lin-Manuel Miranda, whose production of “Hamilton” on the island is mentioned in the chats, called them “a very disturbing portrait of how this Administra­tion operates.”

Even if Rosselló survives until election day next year, it seems clear to many observers that he has been profoundly weakened and less able to deal with crises ranging from the island's bankruptcy proceeding­s to its continued efforts to receive federal funding to help recovery from María.

The governor repeated at a news conference on Tuesday that he has no plan to resign.

“I have not committed an illegal act and I have not committed an act of corruption,” he said. “I committed some improper acts and I asked forgivenes­s for that.”

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