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Murkowski, Wyden deny Puerto Rican progress
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December 19, 2013 |
by Rafael Hernandez Colon
Governor of Puerto Rico. 1973-1976; 1985-1992
In an unprecedented letter to the presidents of the
Commonwealth, Statehood, and Independence parties of Puerto
Rico, Senators Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska),
chairman and majority leader of the Senate Energy Committee with
jurisdiction over the political status of Puerto Rico, ruled out
developed Commonwealth as an option that may be presented to the
people of Puerto Rico in a future referendum.
The policy expressed by Senators Wyden and Murkowski goes
against the right of self-determination of the Puerto Rican
people. It excludes an option sanctioned in I953 by the United
Nations at the request of the United States when Puerto Rico
became a Commonwealth.
U.N. General Assembly Resolution 748 VIII of 1953 not only
recognized Commonwealth as a legitimate option of
self-government for Puerto Rico but it also responded to
President Eisenhower's representation that should Puerto Rico
desire a broader measure of self-government the United States
would correspond to the wishes of the people of Puerto Rico.
The purported policy goes also against the right of Puerto
Ricans as American citizens and in particular of their right to
vote.
This is made clear in the Report of the United States-Puerto
Rico Commission on the Status of Puerto Rico. This Commission
was created by Congress through Public Law 88-271, February 20,
1964. The Chairman of what is now the Energy Committee, Senator
Henry Jackson, was a member of this Commission.
It undertook the most extensive study on the political status of
Puerto Rico that has been carried out since Puerto Rico came
under the sovereignty of the United States.
Its report included three volumes relating to the
legal-constitutional factors, the economic factors, and the
social-cultural factors in relation to the status of Puerto
Rico. In its conclusions on the legal-constitutional factors the
Commission stated:
“The key to the continuation and development of the relationship
between Puerto Rico and the mainland is U.S. citizenship. This
citizenship carries with it basic personal and institutional
protection which cannot be encroached upon by the Legislature of
Puerto Rico or the Congress of the United States. Present
constitutional doctrine, therefore, would not permit any action
rendering ineffective the right of U.S. citizens of Puerto Rico
to participate in the determination of their future, whether it
will be continued and developed Commonwealth, Statehood, or
Independence.”
The Supreme Court of the United States has not altered its
constitutional doctrine since that report was issued.
On the contrary, it has deepened and strengthened the doctrine
prevailing at the time of the report by holding that the voting
rights of Puerto Ricans as U.S. citizens are rights protected by
the Constitution of the United States. Rodríguez v. Popular
Democratic Party 457 US I (1982).
Senators Johnston and Wallop, former chairman and minority
leader of the Energy Committee, fully recognized the right of
Commonwealth supporters to vote for a developed Commonwealth
when they presented S. 244 102 Cong. 1st Session Sec. 402 (1991)
which provided for a referendum on status options to be held in
Puerto Rico.
This bill generated the most serious consideration of this
matter undertaken by several Senate Committees up to this date.
Hundreds of thousands of Puerto Ricans are supporters of a
developed Commonwealth. They have voted for it in the
plebiscites of 1967 and 1993 both of which Commonwealth won over
statehood and independence. The pro-statehood Legislature then
excluded Commonwealth from the ballot in 1998 and Commonwealth
supporters were forced to vote for “none of the above” which won
that plebiscite.
The pro-statehood Legislature then excluded developed
Commonwealth and “none of the above” from the ballot in the
plebiscite held in 2012 and structured two ballots in such a way
that a majority voted for a change in the current status of
Commonwealth.
This majority was not only composed of statehood and
independence voters. Supporters of a developed Commonwealth also
favor changes in the current status. The plurality voting for
statehood in the second ballot by this process has not been
taken seriously in the Congress.
Exclusion of a developed Commonwealth from the ballot would
deprive Commonwealth supporters of their right to vote.
Developed Commonwealth must be on the ballot for a plebiscite to
be a fair exercise of the right to vote of U.S. citizens in
Puerto Rico when making use of their right of self-determination
to propose to Congress changes in their political status.
Developed Commonwealth, however, does not mean a sovereign
Commonwealth as if Puerto Rico were an independent nation.
The U.S. Supreme Court has held that the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico, like a state, is an autonomous political entity “sovereign
over matters not ruled by the U.S. Constitution.” Calero Toledo
v. Pearson 416 U.S.663 (1974).
The developed Commonwealth would include changes in the compact
establishing the federal relations to provide for more effective
self-government. There is nothing in the Constitution that
prevents Congress from making changes in federal laws.
Basic democratic principles require that voters may vote for
such changes if they prefer Commonwealth over statehood or
independence.
By disenfranchising the supporters of Commonwealth, the policy
announced by Senators Wyden and Murkowski will delegitimize
whatever results stem from a referendum and derail the process
towards an ultimate solution on status.
The proposal by President Obama including Commonwealth in the
process subject to an opinion by the Justice Department as to
the constitutional viability of its development is the way to
move forward the process. |
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