At first I couldn't understand this, you know, why do territories get
delegates to the Demopublican conventions.

Then I realized, this has nothing to do with actually casting a vote, and
I was trying to figure this out as to how why it was good for the people
of the US territories.

It has nothing to do with if it is good for them, it is simply a power
tool for the Corporate Parties.

They pay federal income taxes, and get no other representation in US
Politics then this, no one in Congress or the Senate. But they get to pay
federal income taxes, which very little ever comes back to them, as they
do not have to support a Congressperson or Senator like the States do.....
but they still pay an equivalent amount of non refundable Federal income
tax......

But some of us had been asking about this in a group so I snagged this
when I saw it.

Scott

Why the Puerto Rico GOP primary matters
While most of the Latinos in the United States are of Mexican descent,
Puerto Ricans make up 9 percent of the U.S. Hispanic population, making
them the second-largest group. About 10 million Latinos voted in 2010, and
some expect about 12 million to vote in November.

Republican presidential candidate, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum,
right, waves at supporters following a campaign rally in Old San Juan,
Puerto Rico, Thursday March 15, 2012.

(Credit: AP Photo/Ricardo Arduengo)
The U.S. territory of Puerto Rico will have no say in the presidential
election come November, and its Sunday primary has been overshadowed by
bigger upcoming races in states like Illinois.

Still, frontrunners Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum ventured off the
mainland this week to woo Puerto Rico voters. In a race in which every
delegate counts -- and in which a connection with the Latino vote could
pay off in the long run -- the Puerto Rico primary will matter more than
many probably expected it to this year.

Delegates

Puerto Rico will award a total of 23 delegates after Sunday's primary --
20 at-large delegates will be allocated proportionally while the last
three will remain unbound to any candidate, though they can state their
candidate preference.

That makes Puerto Rico nearly as delegate-rich as Guam, the Northern
Mariana Islands, American Samoa and the U.S. Virgin Islands combined.
After Romney won 34 delegates delegates in those territories, his campaign
noted boasted in a memo that they "helped expand his delegate lead,
pushing him closer to the nomination."

With that in mind, it's not that surprising that Romney is heading to
Puerto Rico on Friday, while his wife Ann joined Puerto Rico Gov. Luis
Fortuno to meet with Puerto Rican senior citizens earlier in the day.

Newt Gingrich hasn't traveled to the island himself, but his daughter
Kathy Lubbers has spent the past two days there. Meanwhile, Santorum
visited Puerto Rico earlier in the week, but the trip may have backfired
after he stirred up controversy by asserting that English should be spoken
"universally" in Puerto Rico before the territory becomes a state.
Santorum said his initial comments were misconstrued, but they
nevertheless cost him two important Puerto Rico supporters who found the
remarks offensive.

CBS News Estimated Republican Delegate Scorecard

Latino vote

Santorum's remarks could do broader harm to his reputation within the
Latino community, since Republicans already suffer from the perception
that they're insensitive to Hispanic issues and culture.

"We're not a separate country," Fortuno, who endorsed Romney in January,
told CNN on Friday in response to Santorum's position on the issue. "Gov.
Romney has shown respect for our heritage and our history, understands it
better."

The results of Sunday's primary could also influence Hispanics -- Puerto
Ricans in particular, of course -- on the mainland, both in the primaries
and the general election.

While most of the Latinos in the United States are of Mexican descent,
Puerto Ricans make up 9 percent of the U.S. Hispanic population, making
them the second-largest group. About 10 million Latinos voted in 2010, and
some expect about 12 million to vote in November.

The key swing state of Florida is gaining a net 7,300 Puerto Ricans a
year, according a 2011 survey by the U.S. Census -- far more than any
other U.S. state. About one in 10 Republican voters are Latino in Florida,
and Latinos made up 14 percent of Florida Republican primary voters in
January. Romney did particularly well among those voters, winning 54
percent of Florida Latino Republicans.

Can Romney or Gingrich win over Latinos?

Economy

While Latinos have traditionally been aligned with Democrats, Republicans
are trying to make inroads with the demographic group by stressing their
economic message.

"What's on [Latino's] minds is what's on your mind and my mind and
everybody else's mind: How am I going to provide for my family?," Sen.
Marco Rubio, a Hispanic Republican from Florida, said on CBS This Morning
in January. "What I encourage our candidates to do is speak to that, and
particularly as they are doing, I think, embrace the free enterprise
system... I think that's where we win, I think that's where we're
different than President Obama and his party."

The message could resonate in states hit hard by the mortgage and
financial crises that also have sizeable Latino populations, like Nevada
or Florida. It could also resonate particularly well with Puerto Ricans.
Even though more than 20 percent of Puerto Ricans have a bachelor's degree
-- compared with 16 percent of Puero Ricans on the mainland -- the
unemployment rate on the island is about 15 percent.

When Fortuno announced his endorsement of Romney, he stressed the
importance of Romney's economic platform. "Mitt Romney is the one
candidate who has the record, leadership, experience, and pro-growth plan
to continue the course of private-sector job creation we've begun in
Puerto Rico and provide economic stability for generations," he said.

http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-503544_162-57398881-503544/why-the-puerto-rico-gop-primary-matters/?tag=nl.e886



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