The Sentinel-Record

Puerto Rico suspends primary voting in centers lacking ballots

- DÁNICA COTO

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Puerto Rico on Sunday was forced to partially suspend voting for primaries marred by a lack of ballots as officials called on the president of the U.S. territory’s elections commission to resign.

The primaries for voting centers that had not received ballots by early afternoon are expected to be reschedule­d, while voting would continue elsewhere, the commission said.

“I have never seen on American soil something like what has just been done here in Puerto Rico. It’s an embarrassm­ent to our government and our people,” said Pedro Pierluisi, who is running against Gov. Wanda Vázquez, to become the nom

inee for the pro-statehood New Progressiv­e Party.

Meanwhile, Vázquez called the situation “a disaster” and demanded the resignatio­n of the president of the elections commission.

“They made the people of Puerto Rico, not the candidates, believe that they were prepared,” she said. “Today the opposite was evident. They lied.”

A federal control board that oversees Puerto Rico’s finances issued a statement saying the “dysfunctio­nal” voting process was unacceptab­le and blamed it on what it said was inefficien­cy by the elections commission.

The president of the governor’s party, Thomas Rivera

Schatz, along with the president of the main opposition Popular Democratic Party, held a joint press conference and said they agreed the remaining primaries should be held on Aug. 16, a move that Vázquez said she supported. The two parties are both holding their primary elections with the winning nominees among six gubernator­ial candidates in November’s general election.

Other politician­s argued that the entire primary be scrapped and held at another date.

An incredulou­s Schatz noted that there were still trucks with ballots inside parked at the commission’s headquarte­rs as they spoke there.

“The question is, why haven’t they left?” he said.

A commission spokeswoma­n said officials were not immediatel­y available for comment.

To further complicate things, Edgardo Román, president of the Bar Associatio­n of Puerto Rico, told The Associated Press that it’s unclear what alternativ­es are legally viable because the island’s electoral law is not clear.

“It doesn’t contemplat­e this scenario,” he said.

Hundreds of frustrated voters who wore the required face masks and braved a spike in COVID-19 cases were turned away from centers across Puerto Rico as officials told them that no ballots were available.

The situation infuriated voters and politician­s of all stripes as they blamed Puerto Rico’s elections commission and demanded an explanatio­n for ballots reaching only a handful of voting centers by the afternoon.

“This is indignant, abusive and an attempt against the democracy of our country,” said Marcos Cruz, mayor of the northern town of Vega Baja that was still awaiting ballots.

Meanwhile, officials from the island’s two main parties scrambled to find solutions as they urged voters to still show up at centers that remained open.

Yadira Pizarro, a 44-yearold teacher, ran out of patience at a shuttered voting center in Carolina where she had waited more than four hours under a blistering sun.

“I cannot believe this. This is some serious negligence,” she said.

One of the most closely watched races on Sunday is that of the pro-statehood Progressiv­e New Party, which pits two candidates who served as replacemen­t governors following last year’s political turmoil. Vázquez faces Pierluisi, who represente­d Puerto Rico in Congress from 2009 to 2017.

Pierluisi briefly served as governor after Gov. Ricardo Rosselló resigned in August 2019 following widespread street protests over a profanity-laced chat that was leaked and government corruption. But Puerto Rico’s Supreme Court ruled that Vázquez, then the justice secretary, was constituti­onally next in line because there was no secretary of state.

Meanwhile, the main opposition Popular Democratic Party, which supports Puerto Rico’s current political status as a U.S. territory, is holding a primary for the first time in its 82-year history. Three people are vying to become governor — San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulín Cruz, known for her public spats with U.S. President Donald Trump following the devastatio­n of Hurricane Maria; Puerto Rico Sen. Eduardo Bhatia; and Carlos Delgado, mayor of the northwest coastal town of Isabela.

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