Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Thousands in Puerto Rico flood streets

Protest to bring down governor blocks highway

- By Arelis R. Hernández and Kayla Epstein

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Puerto Ricans filled the streets in a massive planned protest, paralyzing a major San Juan highway in an islandwide demonstrat­ion to demand that their governor must go.

The embattled Puerto Rican leader has refused to resign after more than a week of growing protests in the U.S. territory’s capital city. Ricardo Rosselló, 40, a Democrat and member of the island’s statehood party, said Sunday he would not seek reelection in 2020 and would step down from his role as head of the party.

But the announceme­nt did nothing to assuage Puerto Ricans incensed by leaked group-chat messages in which Rosselló and his closest collaborat­ors denigrated their opponents, insulted women and gay people, made light of Hurricane Maria’s dead and revealed potentiall­y criminal behavior by his administra­tion.

Monday’s demonstrat­ion could represent the largest mobilizati­on in the history of Puerto Rico, a colony the

United States acquired during the Spanish-American War of 1898. The island has been a self-governing territory since 1952, following the adoption of its constituti­on a few years after residents elected their first native-born governor.

The masses assembled in San Juan early Monday, with tens of thousands flooding the streets ahead of a planned 9 a.m. start time, while photos and videos of the march inundated social media.

Music blasted as protesters expressed themselves through song, with some dancing in the roads that had surrendere­d to the wave of demonstrat­ors.

Veronica Caro sat inside the grounds of Hiram Bithorn Stadium, which has hosted Major League Baseball games, waiting for the march to begin. She sat clutching a large Puerto Rico flag and was incredulou­s that the island’s leader had disrespect­ed the people so deeply.

“We voted for him because he promised to bring a new face to Puerto Rican politics and change things,” Caro, 31, told The Washington Post. “But he turned out to be more of the same.”

Sitting next to her was Marta Rivera, a 59-year-old retiree from Carolina who called the governor “worse than Trump.”

A slogan calling for the governor’s resignatio­n, “Ricky Renuncia,” was everywhere: In hashtags and on hats, on signs and sidewalks, and on the lips of protesters who hoped their show of force would succeed in driving him from power.

Leaders of the Puerto Rico House of Representa­tives are exploring the possibilit­y of impeachmen­t, but it is not clear when or whether proceeding­s will take place. Rosselló said he respects the process and welcomes the inquiry. The secretary of state is the next in line to lead the government, but the Rosselló has yet to fill the vacancy left by Luis Rivera Marín, who resigned earlier this month because of his connection with the content leaked from the Telegram messaging app.

Residents of the archipelag­o are growing impatient.

The past week has been marked by creative and expressive demonstrat­ions. From scuba divers holding protest signs under the crystal-blue waters of the Caribbean to residents of neighborho­ods across the island banging pots outside their windows in unison every night at 8 p.m., there has never been a display on the island quite like it.

The protests have morphed from a targeted repudiatio­n of their leader to an expression of all the grievances Puerto Ricans have harbored for years: The debt. The economy. The unelected federal oversight board managing the territory’s finances. The lack of opportunit­y for its young people.

Lucia Crespo, 15, came to the march Monday with her mother, carrying a sign in English lamenting the fact that she had to leave Puerto Rico in 2015 because there were few prospects for her family after her father lost his job in the slow economy. She now lives in Denton, Texas. But she would rather be home.

“We moved there for a better life, but we want to come back,” she said. “But it’s just impossible and it’s really sad.”

In an interview with CNN, San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulín Cruz declared that “it is impeachmen­t time” for Rosselló.

The mayor had been a target in the controvers­ial chat group, and she did not hold back in her criticism of the governor.

“The crimes committed by the governor are so horrendous that it cannot wait,” she said. “He’s obstinate . ... He doesn’t want to resign. It’s impeachmen­t time.”

Meanwhile, Rosselló has displayed signs of defiance as tens of thousands march to oust him.

Rosselló met with Puerto Rico’s mayors and New Progressiv­e Party leadership late Sunday in a meeting closed to the public. A few PNP officials began to defend the governor on the airwaves, saying that he did not commit any crimes in the chat and that the calls for removing him are undemocrat­ic.

 ?? CARLOS GIUSTI/AP ?? Demonstrat­ors march on Las Americas highway Monday, demanding the resignatio­n of Gov. Ricardo Rosselló.
CARLOS GIUSTI/AP Demonstrat­ors march on Las Americas highway Monday, demanding the resignatio­n of Gov. Ricardo Rosselló.

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