Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Puerto Rico to vote on status

Governor urges a yes on statehood, cites economic crisis

- DANICA COTO

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Puerto Rico’s governor is pushing ahead with his top campaign promise of trying to convert the U.S. territory into a state, holding a Sunday referendum to let voters send a message to Congress.

Gov. Ricardo Rossello's party has launched an aggressive ad campaign urging people to “demand respect” with their vote — to choose statehood so the island can obtain equal treatment from the federal government that some say would ease a 10-year economic recession that has spurred nearly a half-million Puerto Ricans to flee to the U.S. mainland.

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

Statehood supporters and some economists say this unequal treatment has contribute­d to the island’s deep economic crisis, which was largely driven by heavy borrowing and in part by the eliminatio­n of federal tax incentives.

“It’s clear we need to change our course toward a new future,” said Puerto Rico Sen. Carmelo Rios, a member of the governor’s party. “Puerto Rico is at its most critical point in its modern history, where its political-economic model has collapsed, society is in a crisis, the government cannot sustain itself, and we have seen with much pain how our people leave us in search of a better chance of quality of life.”

The referendum coincides with the 100th anniversar­y of U.S. citizenshi­p being granted to Puerto Ricans, who are barred from participat­ing in presidenti­al elections and have a representa­tive in Congress with limited voting powers.

Voters will choose one of three options: statehood, free associatio­n/independen­ce or the current territoria­l status. If a majority chooses “free associatio­n/independen­ce,” Puerto Rico would hold another referendum in early October with those two options. Regardless of the referendum’s outcome, the U.S. government has final say on changes to Puerto Rico’s political status, and many believe a Republican-led Congress would not approve Puerto Rico becoming the 51st state.

A recent survey by Gaither Internatio­nal found that more than 60 percent of people interviewe­d believed that solving the island’s status would ease Puerto Rico’s problems. A May 24-26 house-to-house poll published by local newspaper El Nuevo Dia found 52 percent of those interviewe­d favored statehood, compared with 17 percent for the status quo and 15 percent for free associatio­n/independen­ce. It had a margin of error of 3.2 percentage points.

Rossello this week signed a measure that would authorize him to choose two senators and five representa­tives and send them to Washington to demand statehood, a strategy Tennessee employed to join the union in the 18th century.

“Our colonial status is unsustaina­ble and has contribute­d to the current fiscal and economic crisis,” Rossello said.

Puerto Rico has held four referendum­s on the issue. No clear majority emerged in the first three, with voters almost evenly divided between statehood and the status quo. During the last referendum in 2012, 54 percent said they wanted a status change. Sixty-one percent who answered a second question — about 834,000 people — said they favored statehood. But nearly half a million voters left that question blank, leading many to claim the results were not legitimate.

Critics question the timing of the newest referendum, coming about a month after Puerto Rico’s governor announced the island would enter a bankruptcy like process to restructur­e part of its $73 billion public debt.

“Pushing statehood under normal times would be difficult enough; to push while literally under bankruptcy court is absolutely ridiculous,” said Amilcar Barreto, a Northeaste­rn University associate professor who focuses on Puerto Rico politics and identity. “There couldn’t be a worse time … They really haven’t given much thought, perhaps out of desperatio­n, on how that’s going to swing in Congress.”

Three political parties in Puerto Rico are boycotting Sunday’s referendum, including the main opposition party. They question why the government is spending more than $5 million on the vote during a crisis, and note that the U.S. Justice Department has not backed the referendum.

A department spokesman said the agency has not reviewed or approved the language on the ballot. Federal officials in April rejected an earlier version, in part because it did not include the territory’s current status as an option. Rossello’s administra­tion added it and sent the ballot back for review, but the department said it needed more time and asked that the vote be postponed, which it wasn’t.

Even if there’s a clear winner on Sunday, nothing will change without U.S. government authorizat­ion, Barreto said.

“It’s all in Congress’ hands,” he said. “I strongly suspect that regardless of the outcome, that Congress as a collective will probably just ignore the results of the plebiscite and after a week pretend it didn’t even happen.”

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