Vol. 3 No. 5

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A POLITICAL ISLAND, PUERTO RICO ENJOYS ECONOMIC LINKS TO UNITED STATES

WHAT LED PUERTO RICANS TO CAST VOTES AGAINST THE ONLY CONSTITUTIONAL OPTIONS ON THE BALLOT?


In retail, U.S.-style malls abound. Puerto Rico hosts the world's largest J.C. Penney, spanning 350,000 square feet, and will soon host the first Macy's outside the continental United States. Sears at Plaza Las Americas mall in the San Juan area sells more than any other Sears store in the world.

The Land that Would be a State: Divided over Statehood, Puerto Rico's Economy Shows It's Practically Joined Up

San Juan - While Puerto Ricans remain split over whether they want to become a U.S. state, their island's speedy recovery from Hurricane Georges shows a paradox: When it comes to the economy, Puerto Rico is practically a state already.

Integration into the U.S. system -- including the use of the U.S. dollar, U.S. interest rates and U.S. bond markets -- helps keep Puerto Rico 's economy humming along with 3 percent annual growth, while many nations in Latin America and the Caribbean now struggle to grow at all.

Long term, Rossello and others in his pro- statehood party dream of a day when Puerto Rico would not just resemble a state economically --but actually be the 51st star on the U.S. flag.

"Statehood is a development tool," claimed economic czar Vivoni. "It's not just because we'd get more federal funds. It's for the perception of stability that comes with being a state. Statehood would mean even more business and investment." - Doreen Hemlock, SUN-SENTINEL

"QUOTABLES"

Time to Prepare for Young Status Hearings: What Led People to Cast Votes Against the Only Constitutional Options Available to Puerto Rico which Were on the Ballot?

The principal word out of Washington has come from Chairman Don Young (R-AK)) of the House Resources Committee which oversees the territories. He announced the day after the plebiscite that he intends to hold hearings to evaluate the December 13th vote in early 1999 when the 106th Congress takes office.

Young indicated that "although statehood received the highest vote, the fact that 50.3% checked 'None of the Above' reflects the diverse opinions of the 3.8 million US citizens on the island, a significant level of confusion and their inability to resolve an issue which costs American taxpayers over $10 billion each year.

"I see statehood and separate sovereignty as acceptable alternatives for Congress," the Alaska Republican, whose state entered the Union in 1959, said. "Because 'None of the Above' received the majority vote, I intend to conduct oversight hearings to see what led people to cast votes against the only constitutional options available to Puerto Rico which were on the ballot." -CARIBBEAN BUSINESS

The Misguided Drive for Engish-Only Laws

Arizona voters narrowly approved one sweeping initiative that barred Arizona state workers from using any language other than English while on the job or while performing official duties.

The Arizona Supreme Court declared that the law violates constitutional free-speech and equal-protection rights. Last week, the U.S. Supreme Court let stand that state court ruling without comment.

What else was left to say?

English's dominance as the world's premier language for trade, finance and political discourse won't be damaged one iota. And the United States will be ever stronger for such freedom. -Myriam Marquez, ORLANDO SENTINEL

Implications of the Puerto Rico Political Status Plebiscite

What Do The Results Mean For Congress In The Long Term?
Both the 1993 and 1998 plebiscites were conducted under local law after Congress failed to approve federal plebiscite legislation defining the available choices to achieve a permanent status.

In the absence of a clear congressional policy on the status of Puerto Rico, many voters apparently remain unwilling to choose among legally recognized status options. However, the 1998 plebiscite results -- in contrast to 1993 -- do not let Congress off the hook by endorsing an unrealistic and implausible definition of commonwealth that Congress can simply ignore.

Instead, the 1998 "None of the Above" vote demonstrates that the self-determination process for Puerto Rico will remain inert until Congress authorizes a federal plebiscite which defines for the voters the terms for statehood, separate sovereignty or continuation of the current status under the territorial clause powers of Congress.

Congressional Sponsored Plebiscite Necessary
The 1998 plebiscite confirms the need for Congress to ascertain the will of the people of Puerto Rico among options Congress is willing to consider. This can be accomplished only if Congress sponsors a referendum under Federal law and informs the voters of the terms for continuing the current status or changing to a new status.

STATEHOOD ISSUE IS CAUGHT IN STALEMATE - PUERTO RICO AND CONGRESS ARE WAITING FOR THE OTHER TO DEFINE THE POLITICAL RELATIONSHIP

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico - The people of Puerto Rico are divided. Congress won't take a stand. How can Puerto Rico resolve its decades- old debate over political status with the United States?

Resolving the status problem seems locked in a chicken-and-egg bind.

In San Juan, voters look to Washington to spell out terms for Puerto Rico to become a state, enhance its current commonwealth or go independent. Voters want Congress to guarantee it will implement the winning choice.

But in the 100 years since U.S. troops invaded Puerto Rico during the Spanish-American War, Congress has never detailed the options for Puerto Rico or authorized islanders to choose.

In Washington, politicians look first to Puerto Ricans to decide.

U.S. leaders say it's too complex to spell out details first. And they have little incentive to take on the difficult task.

The stalemate costs time, energy and money in San Juan and Washington, with no end in sight for a political relationship that many describe as the world's biggest colony or an island in limbo. -OSCEOLA SENTINEL

RELATED WEBSITES:

www.pnp.org
www.puertoricousa.com
www.puertorico51.org
www.prstatehood.com

De Hostos' Political Thinking Distorted

The best tribute we could render De Hostos today is to achieve what he sought 100 years ago and was ignored by Puerto Rican political sectors at the time. That is, set aside personal ambitions, grudges, bitterness, calumnies, vicious personal attacks, distortion of facts, lies, and unfounded fear and false nationalism, which flooded our political scenario during the campaign leading to the December 13, 1998 status consultation. Instead, let's keep in mind De Hostos' legacy to think intelligently so as to achieve among us the unity and harmony in an embrace of reconciliation so we could reach a consensus among us to ask the 106 U.S. Congress this year to approve legislation establishing a process under which we, in the exercise of our right to self-determination, can vote in a status referendum for viable, legitimate and realistic decolonization status options... But what cannot be included as a decolonization option is our present status (which is the problem) and a free association option like the one included in the December 13 status consultation, which was bound to be unacceptable to the U.S. Congress... By the same token, the plebiscite cannot include as an option the announced new definition of the commonwealth status which is the best of two worlds, already rejected by the U.S. Congress. -Guillermo Moscoso

The Statehood Movement
100 Years of Evolution

Dr. José Celso Barbosa, in order to cement the ideal of Puerto Rican statehood, founded the Puerto Rican Republican Party ("Partido Republicano Puertorriqueño") on July 4th, 1899. The Republican Party obtained the legislative majority from 1900 to 1904. It had the difficult and delicate task of adopting the American political system to the colonial reality of the island.

During those four years, the legal foundations for 20th Century Puerto Rico were approved. The most significant legislation included: trial by jury; writ of habeas corpus; beginnings of the first labor legislation; freedom of religion, speech and the press; the political, civil, penal, criminal and procedural codes; tax law; the new electoral law which granted a vote to the illiterate; Spanish and English as official languages; the establishment of the public school system, and scholarships to study in the United States; the establishment of industrial schools and the University of Puerto Rico; the position of official historian of Puerto Rico; and the creation of the island police force.

For Barbosa, "Americanization" was not incompatible with island patriotism, but rather it was the vital instrument by which to obtain social justice and economic progress. For him, political unity with the United States did not imply dissolving the cultural personality of the Puerto Rican people. Political assimilation was not synonymous with cultural assimilation. He was convinced that Calderón's native tongue could coexist with that of Shakespeare, thus creating a more educated and dynamic people. -Gonzalo F. Cordova

THANKS TO THE PDP, PUERTO RICO'S FREE LUNCH WILL SOON BE OVER

Make no mistake about it, the prospect of federal taxation for Puerto Rico's elite, not the voter's preference for the status quo tipped the scales against an outright statehood triumph on December 13th. Paying little or no taxes under the porous Hacienda collection apparatus, the wealthy five percent among us feared the efficiency of the Internal Revenue Service more than they fancied commonwealth.

For having artfully raised the specter of federal taxation as the curse of statehood, commonwealth advocates have rubbed the noses of American taxpayers in the more than $10 billion yearly Puerto Rican subsidy, inviting re-evaluation of the "something for nothing" philosophy that has served as the PDP's underpinning over these past 45 plus years.

Washington will take away our "free lunch" as Young and his congressional colleagues investigate the implications and causes of the 'None of the Above' results. Spurred on by their stateside constituents legislation will almost certainly be introduced and passed to make us carry our own weight fiscally.

Once having achieved the dubious distinction of first class US citizenship tax-wise -- thanks to the PDP, full and equal American citizenship as residents of the fifty-first state will almost certainly soon follow thereafter as sure as night follows day. -Miriam Ramirez de Ferrer

The Vote Leaves Puerto Rico Without a Voter-Mandated Course

The recent referendum in Puerto Rico was supposed to set the course for the island's political future. Instead, the vote left the outlook for the Caribbean island as cloudy as a stormy sky.

[T]he ballot was so crowded with options and the various parties ran such negative campaigns, it should not be surprising that disgusted citizens lodged a protest vote in a contest they recognized would be meaningless.

Congress should approve another referendum , this one binding and including only viable options. "None of the above" does nothing to resolve the island's future. -THE TAMPA TRIBUNE, Editorial

EXPERT SAYS CONGRESS HAS POWER TO TAX PUERTO RICO

Washington -- Nothing in the current US-Puerto Rico relationship would prevent Congress from levying federal taxes in Puerto Rico under commonwealth, the Congressional Research Service's constitutional expert said.

"Congress has full powers to tax the US territories and there is nothing special under commonwealth relationship to stop it," said John Killian, who often writes opinions for Congress on Puerto Rico. "Taxation without representation is just a slogan. There is nothing in the Constitution about it," Killian said.

[A] "trend" may be building here to get Puerto Rico to contribute to the federal treasury... [as] federal officials here ask why the island is receiving some $10 billion yearly in federal funds without contributing to the federal treasury. -Robert Friedman, THE SAN JUAN STAR

Rejecting Commonwealth and Favoring Statehood, Island Voters Leave Status Issue Up To Washington

After four centuries of colonialism under Spain, and a century and three days after the signing of the Treaty of Paris of Dec. 10, 1898, we expected a decision in favor of decolonization.

Each of the options on the plebiscite ballot was to confer dignity, liberty and pride on all Puerto Ricans. But each of the three status formulas implied the assumption of certain duties and responsibilities.

Unfortunately, 50% of the voters decided not to decide. Puerto Rico decided not to decide. The decision is now up to Washington. -Neftali Fuster

Write your Member of Congress in Support of Puerto Rico Self-Determination!

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Under Statehood All Puerto Ricans
Would Have Been

American Taxpayers
Have Forked Over


$ 181,836.82


$ 224,743,483,967.04

Wealthier Today, and
Commonwealth is Costing Them
$6,000.00 More Every Year!
Subsidizing Puerto Rico Commonwealth, and It's Costing Them $22,821,918.52 More Each and Every Day of the Year!


PUERTO RICO SELF-DETERMINATION
Puerto Ricans Earning Their Own Way
Puerto Rico Paying Its Own Way

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