http://headlines.igc.apc.org:8080/wnheadlines/974498467/index_html

            Posted by WomensNet on Friday November 17, @02:01PM

            NEW YORK, Nov 10 (IPS) - As the United States waits to see
who
            will be its next president, another hotly contested race has
ended in
            Puerto Rico with voters electing the island's first female
governor and
            dealing a blow to the pro-statehood New Progressive Party
(NPP).

            PUERTO RICO: Islanders Choose First
            Woman Governor

            Originally posted in IGC Member Conference:

            Topic 302 POLITICS-PUERTO RICO: Islanders Cho
            newsdesk The Inter Press Service in English 7:09 PM Nov 10,
2000

            Copyright 2000 InterPress Service, all rights reserved.
Worldwide
            distribution via the APC networks.

            *** 10-Nov-0* ***

            Title: POLITICS-PUERTO RICO: Islanders Choose First Woman
            Governor

            By Katherine Stapp

            NEW YORK, Nov 10 (IPS) - As the United States waits to see
who
            will be its next president, another hotly contested race has
ended in
            Puerto Rico with voters electing the island's first female
governor and
            dealing a blow to the pro-statehood New Progressive Party
(NPP).

            Sila Calderon, the mayor of San Juan, will replace Gov.
Pedro
            Rossello, an NPP politician who has held the office for
eight years.

            Calderon ran on a platform of ousting the US Navy from the
adjacent
            island of Vieques, where a bombing range has generated mass
protests,
            and by hammering away at allegations of corruption within
the ruling
            NPP - including a scandal in which bureaucrats were
siphoning off
            shoeboxes of cash intended for AIDS patients.

            Rossello's popularity had been steadily dropping in polls,
due partly to
            what one analyst described as his ''high-handed and
arrogant'' style, and
            this hardly boosted his party's gubernatorial candidate,
Carlos
            Pesquera.

            The new governor favours preserving Puerto Rico's
commonwealth
            relationship with the United States, rather than making the
island the
            51st state, and voters clearly identified with her position
- as a similar
            majority did in non-binding referendums held in 1993 and
1998.

            Puerto Ricans currently enjoy what is known as commonwealth
status,
            in which they are US citizens but cannot vote in national
elections, and
            receive federal aid, but do not pay taxes. The island has
one non-voting
            representative in the US Congress.

            ''The issue (of status) is a constant undercurrent,'' said
Lance Oliver, a
            freelance journalist based in Puerto Rico who covered the
campaign.
            Still, he added, ''people have gotten better at separating
their vote for
            who should govern from the question of status. Elections are
less of a
            referendum than they used to be''.

            In elections held Tuesday, Calderon, 58, defeated her pro-
statehood
            opponent, Carlos Pesquera, by about 53 to 47 percent, the
closest
            gubernatorial race in 20 years in Puerto Rico.

            Her opposition Popular Democratic Party also seized control
of the
            island's legislature, and won 46 out of 74 mayoral seats, a
reversal of
            previous elections.

            Juan Manuel Garcia Passalacqua, a noted political analyst on
the island
            and member of the Council on Foreign Relations, said that
although the
            dominant issue of the campaign was corruption, ''the writing
(is) on the
            wall'' in terms of rejecting statehood.

            ''That issue is over,'' he said. ''The key point now is how
will the Navy
            react to 67 percent of the people wanting them out.''

            Third-party candidate Ruben Berrios, of the Puerto Rican
            Independence Party, which favours making the island a
completely
            sovereign state, came in a distant third with about six
percent of the
            vote.

            Berrios was a leading figure in the campaign to evict the US
Navy from
            Vieques, where it has had a bombing range since 1940, and
had
            camped out there with other protesters for almost a year in
a bid to halt
            the military exercises. His staunch opposition to the Navy
struck a
            chord with Puerto Ricans, and helped to double his support
on
            Tuesday.

            Puerto Rico's independence movement was ruthlessly
suppressed by
            the Spanish colonisers and then the United States, and has
yet to build
            the momentum of the two main parties, which are largely
identified with
            their positions on the island's status.

            Unlike the US election, there tends to be relatively few
undecided
            voters in Puerto Rico's elections, and the results were not
unexpected,
            observers said.

            ''There is almost always an institutionalised split here,
never a huge
            landslide,'' Oliver said. ''If someone wins by five or six
percent, that's a
            lot.

            ''People really have an identification with their party and
are much more
            politically active than in the States, so there is small
pool of people that
            go one way or the other,'' he added.

            Although it appears unlikely that the island's status will
change anytime
            soon, Puerto Ricans could again be summoned to the polls if
a planned
            binding referendum promised by Pres. Bill Clinton comes
through. No
            date has yet been set, but Clinton has said he will address
the issue
            before his term expires in January.

            Voters will also decide if the Navy should be allowed to
remain in
            Vieques, in exchange for about 50 million dollars in aid, or
if it must
            leave by May 2003. (END/IPS/IP/ks/da/00)

            Origin: Rome/POLITICS-PUERTO RICO/ ----

            [c] 2000, InterPress Third World News Agency (IPS) All
rights
            reserved

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--

Mine Aysen Doyran
PhD Student
Department of Political Science
SUNY at Albany
Nelson A. Rockefeller College
135 Western Ave.; Milne 102
Albany, NY 12222



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