San Juan: For the first time in their history, a majority of Puerto Ricans expressed support for US statehood in a non-binding referendum on the future of the island’s relationship with Washington.
The result of the plebiscite, held Tuesday to coincide with the general election, breaks decades of local support for the island’s current commonwealth status. Just over 61 percent of voters favoured seeking to make Puerto Rico the 51st state, while 33.31 percent supported an enhanced commonwealth arrangement and just 5.53 percent were in favour of full independence.
Statehood would require the approval of the US Congress. The opposition Popular Democratic Party, whose candidate Alejandro Garcia Padilla won the gubernatorial contest, favours maintaining commonwealth status.
The referendum was the initiative of now-outgoing Gov. Luis Fortuno, whose New Progressive Party advocates statehood.
Puerto Rico came under Washington’s sway in 1898 and island residents were granted US citizenship in 1917, yet they cannot vote in presidential elections, though Puerto Ricans living in the continental US can.
Since 1952, the island has been a self-governing, unincorporated territory of the US with broad internal autonomy, but without the right to conduct its own foreign policy.
Tuesday was the fourth time in 45 years that Puerto Ricans have been asked to express themselves on the status question.
The first referendum, in 1967, produced a majority of just over 60 percent in favour of remaining a US commonwealth. In 1993, support for commonwealth status had shrunk to a 48.6 percent plurality.
Five years later, 50.3 percent of Puerto Ricans casting ballots rejected all three options – statehood, independence and commonwealth – and checked the box marked “none of the above”.
This was the first time in history that the question had been phrased in that way, and 53.99 percent said that they were against the commonwealth. (IANS)