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White House Intergovernmental Affairs Report on Puerto Rico Status
White House ^ | 12/22/2005 | White House

Posted on 12/22/2005 2:58:23 PM PST by cll

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To: TeĆ³filo; cll

Beautifully written.

Puerto Rico is a beautiful place, and there are a lot of beautiful people there.

Don't let anyone define you. You were born an American, you'll die an American. You don't need anyone's permission to do either one.

PR is a land inhabited exclusively by Americans, and consequently it is a permanent part of the US. The only question is the terms of the marriage. We're already married, mind you, we're just arguing about whether or not to tear up the pre-nup.


41 posted on 12/23/2005 12:42:38 PM PST by marron
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To: marron; cll
Puerto Rico@National Geographic Magazine

"The rum bottle in front of him almost empty, Jacobo Morales is approaching the end of a rambling stage monologue on what it means to be Puerto Rican. Earlier he had toasted "the great American nation, of which I'm proud to be a citizen." But with this most recent toast his mood has turned militantly nationalistic: "What I am is Ameri . . . Puerto Rican!" And then another turnabout. "Puerto Rican and Ameri. . . . What I am is a realist, because one thing is what I feel, another is what's convenient. What I feel is Puerto Rican first and Puerto Rican always—but what about the welfare checks?" Finally, polishing off the last of the bottle, Morales makes up his mind, shouting: "Viva Puerto Rico libre!—Long live free Puerto Rico!"

"The last line always brings the house down," he says happily.

"That's why we close the bars on election day," a government official in the capital of San Juan noted cynically as we discussed Morales's performance. "Otherwise the whole country would vote for independence."

"Turnout on election days remains steady at around 85 percent (although much of the fervor may come from the fact that thousands of government jobs, which account for one-third of the island's total workforce, can be at stake when one party replaces another)."

One third of the island's workforce works for the local government and another third works for our federal government and a goodly portion of those LEFT (pun intended) work for companies that have federal contracts or are there avoiding 90% of their federal income taxes, or both!

Any U.S. Taxpayers that want to make a state out of this Socialistic, parasitic, pesthole are out of their minds.

Please, governor Acevedo, leave the bars open in Puerto Rico on the day of this plebiscite.

LOL!

42 posted on 12/23/2005 8:12:54 PM PST by 4Freedom (America is no longer the 'Land of Opportunity'. It's the 'Land of Illegal Alien Opportunists'!!!)
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To: cll

It's funny that you make such a statement. I visited la isla for the first time in 17 years and SJ DID looked like a tropical Bronx.

I'll tell you what. I worked my butt off to help position the PNP into an enviable position with the ruling class in the USA back in the late 70s. You can ask that slime of Romero Barcelo. My friend, the ruling class will NEVER give statehood to Borinquen no matter how much of a landslide the statehooders will show to Congress. Puertoricans are not ready and will never be ready to give themselves, body and soul, to the Evangelical Gringo Church (aka The Continental USA).

And please stop deluding yourselves, especially the islanders, that you have too much to give, pay tax, Walgreens, yada, yada. It's not going to happen.

Lastly, I was born and raised there. I went to show my children where their dad was born. You guys have a greater mess down there than when I used to live there. Jesus, Maria y Jose. Stop with the excuses and fix it up! Carajo!


43 posted on 12/28/2005 12:47:20 PM PST by Ruskiy (F**K the Ay Bendito.)
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To: Ruskiy

I smell...Troll!


44 posted on 12/28/2005 12:51:10 PM PST by cll (San Juan, PR, USA)
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To: cll

LOL

A troll??? My friend, is it because you didn't like what I said? What do you need besides my name? You want me to drop some names? How about Albita Rivera formerly Granados. She is still my good friend. BTW, Jeb Bush had a major crush on her and I kept telling her to go for him, instead she ended up with that loser of Pipo. Another scumbag was Freddy Valentin. I went to the UPR with all those guys. I was a member of the student council which delayed as much as we could a student strike. Unbeknownst to me, I had a security detail following me for my own protection. One of the reasons we left the island was because my mother refused to "cook the books" for Hernan and look what happened to him. BTW, neither me nor any member of my family was an elected official.

I stand by what I said. It's not going to happen. Every 4 years it's the same thing, quitate tu pa' ponerme yo. Nothing changes. I was there when Ford offered the statehood to PR. Of course, he did this a couple of weeks before he left the White House. It's all a political ploy pandering to the hispanic vote in the USA. Wake up!

Tell you what. If the people of PR really want to become the 51st, get rid of Miss Universe and the Olympic joke, er, I mean teams. That would be the first step. What do you have to say about that?


45 posted on 12/29/2005 7:34:26 AM PST by Ruskiy (F**K the Ay Bendito.)
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To: Ruskiy
The Olympic Commitee and the Ms. Universe franchise are private concerns and have nothing to do with anything. That shows how much you know.

And by the way you write, in complete contempt to your purported own people, affirms that you are a troll. A PPD troll.
46 posted on 12/29/2005 8:10:38 AM PST by cll (San Juan, PR, USA)
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To: cll

Oh brother. Man, you are really blind. Like my grandmother used to say: "No hay peor ciego que el que no quiere ver." Don't worry, won't hear from me again. That's why I moved miles away from that nonsense. Please keep the ay bendito.

P.S. I live approximately 2 miles from the tomb of Samuel Wilson, aka Uncle Sam. Yes THAT Uncle Sam.


47 posted on 12/29/2005 7:47:52 PM PST by Ruskiy (F**K the Ay Bendito.)
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To: cll

"That the current political status of Puerto Rico and that four million American citizens in that territory are subject to the whims of Congress, making the United States of America lord and sovereign over a people that practically have no say over it."

That's sounds pretty much like the situation the rest of us here on the mainland are in.


48 posted on 12/29/2005 8:00:10 PM PST by dljordan
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To: Ruskiy

"Don't worry, won't hear from me again"

Good. Many mainland so-called Puerto Ricans, with your superiority complex and contempt for your birthplace, as if changing address would change character, are some of our worst enemies. Hope is not too cold in Troy!

Feliz año nuevo y Happy Trikin'


49 posted on 12/30/2005 4:16:43 AM PST by cll (San Juan, PR, USA)
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To: cll

I have lots of close Puerto Rican friends here in the Orlando, Florida (I-4 corridor) area. In fact I will be seeing some of them tonight for dinner. We are planning a 10-day trip to PR toward the end of January - just bought our plane tickets. Will probably spend the first few days in and around San Juan, but nothing is set in stone just yet.

Since they were born and raised there, they know their way around the Island and have lots of friends and relatives there. Some of their relatives are talking about treating us to a pig roast. :)

We always have a blast together, so I'm sure this trip will be no different - I'm really looking forward to it! Wooo Hooo!!!


50 posted on 12/30/2005 4:57:28 AM PST by Matchett-PI ( "History does not long entrust the care of freedom to the weak or the timid." -- Dwight Eisenhower)
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To: Matchett-PI

Have fun!

We're not even halfway through our Christmas festivities and I'm already almost burned out from hosting friends from the mainland.


51 posted on 12/30/2005 5:18:23 AM PST by cll (San Juan, PR, USA)
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To: cll

Thanks! I'm SURE we will!


52 posted on 12/30/2005 5:22:02 AM PST by Matchett-PI ( "History does not long entrust the care of freedom to the weak or the timid." -- Dwight Eisenhower)
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To: dljordan

Somehow that doesn't make me feel any better but thanks for sharing the sentiment!


53 posted on 12/30/2005 8:57:32 AM PST by cll (San Juan, PR, USA)
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To: moonman

"I'd rather see them as a state."
brillant more electoral votes for Democrats
my opinion
let them go their own way as a nation
cut them off from monetary support


54 posted on 12/30/2005 8:59:17 AM PST by DM1
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To: cll

Text of the document itslef, for the record:

STATEMENT OF GUIDING PRINCIPLES
The mission of the President’s Task Force on Puerto Rico’s Status (Task Force) is to provide options for Puerto Rico’s future status and relationship with the Government of the United States of America. It has approached this mission without prejudice towards a status option and has developed options that are compatible with the Constitution and basic laws and policies of the United States.

The Task Force has developed these options after listening to and considering the views of individuals, elected officials, and other representatives of the people of Puerto Rico to ensure that views and positions have been objectively considered irrespective of affiliation or ideology.

EXECUTIVE ORDERS CONCERNING PUERTO RICO’S STATUS
President George H.W. Bush issued a Memorandum on November 30, 1992, to heads of Executive Departments and Agencies establishing the current administrative relationship between the Federal Government and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.

This memorandum directs all Federal departments, agencies, and officials to treat Puerto Rico administratively as if it were a State insofar as doing so would not disrupt Federal programs or operations.

President Bush’s memorandum remains in effect until Federal legislation is enacted to alter the status of Puerto Rico in accordance with the freely expressed wishes of the people of Puerto Rico (See Appendix A). On December 23, 2000, President William J. Clinton signed Executive Order 13183, which established the President’s Task Force on Puerto Rico’s Status and the rules for its membership.

This Executive Order outlines the policy and functions of the Task Force in identifying the options for the island’s future status and the process for realizing an option (See Appendix B). On April 30, 2001, President George W. Bush amended Executive Order 13183, extending the deadline for the Task Force to forward a report to the President until August 2001 (See Appendix C). President Bush signed an additional amendment to Executive Order 13183 on December 3, 2003, which established the current cochairs and instructed the Task Force to issue reports as needed, but no less than once every two years (See Appendix D).

HISTORICAL OVERVIEW
The Commonwealth of Puerto Rico has a rich tradition and history. As United States citizens, the people of Puerto Rico have enhanced American society and culture. Among their many contributions, Puerto Ricans have been recognized for their service and sacrifice in the United States Armed Forces.

The modern history of Puerto Rico traces back to November 19, 1493, when Christopher Columbus discovered the island on his second voyage to the New World and found it populated by Taíno Indians. He named the island “San Juan Bautista,” for St. John the Baptist, and the main town “Puerto Rico.” In 1521, the city and the island exchanged names, and the City of San Juan Bautista de Puerto Rico became the official capital. The Treaty of Paris, which formally ended the Spanish-American War on December 10, 1898, resulted in Spain relinquishing its holdings in the Caribbean, including Puerto Rico. The island was governed by a U.S. military governor from October 1898 until May 1900.

In 1900, the U.S. Congress passed the Foraker Act, which established a civilian government in Puerto Rico, with a governor and an executive council appointed by the President of the United States, a legislature, a judicial system, and a non-voting Resident Commissioner in Congress. Under the Foraker Act, all Federal laws were to be enforced on the island.

During an address to the Puerto Rican legislature in 1906, President Theodore Roosevelt recommended that Puerto Ricans become U.S. citizens.

Congress next acted by passing the Jones-Shafroth Act in 1917, which established the island as an “organized but unincorporated” territory of the United States and granted U.S. citizenship to Puerto Ricans. Under the Jones Act, the United States Congress had the authority to stop action taken by the island legislature.

The United States maintained control over economic, defense, and other basic governmental affairs. On April 2, 1943, U.S. Senator Millard Tydings introduced a bill in Congress calling for independence for Puerto Rico. This bill ultimately was defeated. On July 21, 1946, President Harry Truman appointed Jesús T. Piñero as the first native Puerto Rican to hold the position of governor of the island.

On August 4, 1947, the U.S. Congress approved a law allowing the election of the governor by the people of Puerto Rico. On November 2, 1948, Luis Muñoz Marín became the first governor elected by the Puerto Rican electorate with 61.2% of the vote.

On July 3, 1950, the U.S. Congress passed Public Law 600 (known as the Puerto Rican Federal Relations Act), giving Puerto Rico the right to establish a government and a constitution for the internal administration of the Puerto Rico government and “on matters of purely local concern.” It expressly upholds the terms of the Jones Act of 1917. On June 4, 1951, 76.5% of the island’s electorate favored Public Law 600 in a referendum.

The people of Puerto Rico approved a new constitution with 80% of the vote in a referendum held on March 3, 1952.

In response to the growing movement for statehood in Puerto Rico, Governor Roberto Sánchez Vilella arranged for a plebiscite (a popular vote concerning changes in sovereignty) to be held on July 23, 1967, in which the Puerto Rican electorate was asked to vote on the issue of Puerto Rico’s relationship with the United States. In this first plebiscite on political status, Puerto Ricans were asked to choose among the existing commonwealth status, statehood, and independence. The voters chose to continue the commonwealth status:
Commonwealth . . . . . 60%
Statehood . . . . . . . . . . 39%
Independence . . . . . . . . 1%

In 1991, a plebiscite calling for a review of the commonwealth status was rejected by 55% of the electorate. On November 14, 1993, another plebiscite was held on the island in which a plurality of Puerto Ricans favored retaining commonwealth status in association with the United States as a self-governing polity.

The electorate voted as follows:
Commonwealth . . . . .826,326 (48.6%)
Statehood . . . . . . . . . .788,296 (46.3%)
Independence . . . . . . . .75,620 (4.4%)
Blank and Void . . . . . . .10,748 (0.7%)

On February 26, 1997, Congressman Don Young of Alaska introduced House Resolution 856, which called for a vote on Puerto Rico’s status before December 31, 1998. Although the House Resolution failed to be enacted, a plebiscite was nevertheless held on December 13, 1998, in which the Puerto Rican electorate rejected all status options presented with “none of the above” receiving a slight majority of the votes.

The votes were as follows:
Petition 1, “Territorial” Commonwealth
993 votes (0.06%)
Petition 2, Free Association
4,536 votes (0.29%)
Petition 3, Statehood
728,157 votes (46.49%)
Petition 4, Independence
39,838 votes (2.54%)
None of the Above
787,900 votes (50.30%)
Blank and Void Ballots
4,846 votes (0.31%)

In this plebiscite, the leadership for the Popular Democratic Party (PDP) backed continued commonwealth status, but campaigned in favor of “none of the above” because of disagreement with the “territorial” definition of the commonwealth option on the ballot.

LEGAL ANALYSIS OF OPTIONS FOR PUERTO RICO’S STATUS

The U.S. Constitution allows for three options for the future status of Puerto Rico: continuing territorial status (including the current Commonwealth system), statehood, and independence. This section briefly explains the possibilities and major issues under each option.

1. Continuing Territorial Status
The existing form of government in Puerto Rico is often described as a “Commonwealth,” and this term recognizes the powers of self-government that Congress has allowed.

The current Commonwealth system was established pursuant to Public Law 600, discussed in the previous section. Congress approved the Puerto Rican constitution in 1952, subject to several conditions that Puerto Rico fulfilled through amendments that took effect in 1953. In addition, the term “Commonwealth” has been given other meanings with regard to Puerto Rico. Some of the uses of the term in that context are discussed in a report of the Committee on Resources of the U.S. House of Representatives regarding H.R. 856, the “United States-Puerto Rico Political Status Act,” which narrowly passed the House in 1998 (See H.R. Rep. No. 105-131 (1997)).

However that term may be used, Puerto Rico is, for purposes under the U.S. Constitution, “a territory,” as President George H.W. Bush recognized in his 1992 memorandum concerning Puerto Rico (See Appendix A). It is, therefore, subject to congressional authority, under the Constitution’s Territory Clause, “to dispose of and make all needful Rules and Regulations respecting the Territory… belonging to the United States.”

In adopting this view of Puerto Rico’s current status, President Bush was confirming the view that the U.S. Department of Justice had taken in congressional testimony in 1991 and had first reached in 1959. Congress may continue the current system indefinitely, but it also may revise or revoke it at any time. For example, Congress could legislate directly on local matters or determine the island’s governmental structure by statute, as it has for Guam and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

Congress likewise could allow the island increased powers of self government, subject to limitations imposed by the Constitution (some of which, such as in the area of international agreements, are discussed in a letter that the Justice Department sent to Congress on January 18, 2001, included in this report as Appendix E).

Some have proposed a “New Commonwealth” status. Under this proposal, the island would become an autonomous, non-territorial, non- State entity in permanent union with the United States under a covenant that could not be altered without the “mutual consent” of Puerto Rico and the Federal Government.

The U.S. Constitution, however, does not allow for such an arrangement. For entities under the sovereignty of the United States, the only constitutional options are to be a State or territory. As the U.S. Supreme Court stated in 1879, “All territory within the jurisdiction of the United States not included in any State must necessarily be governed by or under the authority of Congress” (First Nat. Bank v. Yankton County, 101 U.S. 129, 133 (1879)). It is a general rule that one legislature cannot bind a subsequent one. For example, one Congress may repeal or amend the laws of a previous one, and Congress may pass laws inconsistent with treaties. Thus, one Congress cannot irrevocably legislate with regard to a territory (at least where the legislation is not part of converting the territory into a State) and, therefore, cannot restrict a future Congress from revising a delegation to a territory of powers of self-government.

The Federal Government may relinquish United States sovereignty by granting independence or ceding the territory to another nation; or it may, as the Constitution provides, admit a territory as a State, thus making the Territory Clause inapplicable. But the U.S. Constitution does not allow other options. It therefore is not possible, absent a constitutional amendment, to bind future Congresses to any particular arrangement for Puerto Rico as a Commonwealth.

The Executive Branch of the Federal Government, through the Department of Justice, temporarily took a different position on this question by relying on the partial exception to the general rule for acts of a legislature that are contracts granting or transferring property as a private party would do. Under the U.S. Constitution’s Fifth Amendment, Congress cannot deprive “any person” of “property” without due process of law and cannot take “private property” for public use without providing just compensation. Where the Federal Government has granted a vested property right, it ordinarily may not take away that right without paying damages. The Justice Department in a 1963 memorandum concluded that a compact granting self-governmental authority to a territory could “create vested rights of a political nature” that a subsequent Congress could not revoke unilaterally.

The Department reiterated this position as late as 1975, and the United States that year entered into a covenant with another territory, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, that contains a mutual-consent provision.

The Justice Department reconsidered this position in the administration of President George H.W. Bush, apparently spurred by a 1986 Supreme Court decision that reaffirmed a more traditional understanding of vested property rights in holding that a State’s purported contractual right to withdraw its employees from Social Security was not a property right (Bowen v. Agencies Opposed to Soc. Sec. Entrapment, 477 U.S. 41, 54-56 (1986)). In congressional testimony on February 7, 1991, U.S. Attorney General Richard Thornburgh rejected the view that a mutual-consent provision could prevent a future Congress from altering any covenant with Puerto Rico (See Political Status of Puerto Rico: Hearings on S. 244 Before the Senate Comm. on Energy and Natural Resources, 102d Cong. 206- 07 (1991)).

The Justice Department reaffirmed that position repeatedly during the Clinton Administration, particularly in a 1994 memorandum concerning Guam, in congressional testimony on October 4, 2000, and in its January 18, 2001, letter to Congress (See Appendices E and F). After undertaking a thorough review of the question in connection with the work of the Task Force, the Department continues to adhere to that position.

In summary, whether the “New Commonwealth” proposal is understood to envision a political entity under some form of United States sovereignty or an independent country somehow associated with the United States, a mutual-consent provision would be unenforceable and could not guarantee that any given political status or agreement would be permanent.

2. Statehood
The Constitution authorizes Congress to admit new States. In practice, admission by Congress often has been preceded by territories developing their own constitutions and petitioning for statehood. In addition, Congress may set conditions for admission of a territory as a State.

Once admitted, a new State stands on an equal footing with the original States in all respects. Puerto Rico is an “unincorporated” territory, which means that it is not intended to become a State. It therefore is subject only to the most fundamental provisions of the U.S. Constitution.

As part of the process of becoming a State, a territory becomes “incorporated” into the United States by Congress. An incorporated territory is subject to the entire U.S. Constitution except for those provisions that expressly apply only to States. In addition, an “incorporated territory” is subject to the Constitution’s Tax Uniformity Clause, which requires that all Federal “Duties, Imposts, and Excises” be uniform throughout “the United States.” Puerto Rico’s residents are currently exempt from most Federal income tax laws and receive certain tax references. If Puerto Rico were incorporated (or admitted), the Constitution would generally no longer allow such preferential treatment, but would probably allow a transition period to minimize economic dislocation.

If Puerto Rico were to become a State, Puerto Rican citizens would be entitled to vote for President, two U.S. Senators, and full voting Members in the House of Representatives. With regard to the House, Article I, Section 2 of the U.S. Constitution states: Representatives and direct Taxes shall be apportioned among the several States which may be included within this Union, according to their respective Numbers… The actual Enumeration shall be made within three Years after the first Meeting of the Congress of the United States, and within every subsequent Term of ten Years, in such Manner as they shall by Law direct. The number of Members in the House of Representatives would be in proportion to Puerto Rico’s population based on the next congressional reapportionment, following the 2010 census. The U.S. Census Bureau conducts the population count of each State and is responsible for the administrative procedures for the apportionment for each State based on a formula determined by Congress.

When the States of Hawaii and Alaska were admitted, Congress temporarily increased the membership of the House to allow each of the new States to elect one Representative until the next reapportionment. Congress also, in some cases where the population justified it, has made interim additions of more than one Representative.

3. Independence
As already discussed, Congress’ power under the U.S. Constitution’s Territory Clause does include the power to relinquish all of its sovereignty over a territory. Congress thus may determine whether and upon what conditions a territory may receive independence, and its authority to regulate those conditions remains until the point of independence.

For example, the Territory of the Philippines, which the United States acquired from Spain at the same time as Puerto Rico, received its independence under the Philippine Independence Act of 1934. Under this Act, Congress set out the process by which the islands eventually would gain independence by authorizing the Philippine government to hold a convention to draft a constitution for an interim Commonwealth under which the Philippines would exercise extensive self-government, with limited United States involvement, pending full independence.

The constitution was subject to approval by the President and ratification by the qualified voters of the Philippines. The Act provided that, after a transition period of ten years from the establishment of the Commonwealth, the President by proclamation would “withdraw and surrender all right of possession, supervision, jurisdiction, control, or sovereignty” over the islands (with the exception of certain governmental property and military bases) and “recognize the independence of the Philippines as a separate and self-governing nation.”

In 1946, after World War II, the President did proclaim independence, and the two nations entered into a Treaty of General Relations. Another possible model of independence is that of the “freely associated states” of Micronesia, the Marshall Islands, and Palau. The freely associated states were part of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands, which the United States administered following World War II. Micronesia and the Marshall Islands became independent in 1986, and Palau became independent in 1994, after Congress approved negotiated “compacts of free association” with the territories. Among other rights, they therefore gained the full right to conduct their own foreign relations.

The freely associated states retained close ties to the United States, however, and the United States continued to provide security, defense, and various other types of financial assistance and services.

Citizens of the freely associated states may generally enter the United States as nonimmigrants and may establish residence and work here. Although these three compacts did contain clauses requiring the mutual consent of the parties to changes, the renegotiated compacts approved by Congress in 2003 with Micronesia and the Marshall Islands provided for unilateral termination, consistent with the constitutional views discussed above. Among the constitutionally available options, freely associated status may come closest to providing for the relationship between Puerto Rico and the United States that advocates for “New Commonwealth” status appear to desire. But it would need to be made clear to the people of Puerto Rico that freely associated status is a form of independence from the United States and cannot (absent an amendment of the U.S. Constitution) be made immune from the possibility of unilateral termination by the United States. If this option were considered, there also would be a policy question for the President and Congress as to whether Puerto Rico’s significantly greater population (approximately 4 million compared to 136,000 in Micronesia, the largest of the freely associated states) makes a relationship with Puerto Rico similar to that with the existing freely associated states desirable or practical.

Any planning for Puerto Rican independence would need to consider citizenship. Individuals born in Puerto Rico are citizens of the United States by statute (rather than by being born or naturalized in the United States). The general rule is that citizenship follows sovereignty. So if Puerto Rico were to become an independent sovereign nation, those who chose to become citizens of it or had U.S. citizenship only by statute would cease to be citizens of the United States, unless a different rule were prescribed by legislation or treaty, much as citizens of the Philippines lost their status as U.S. nationals once the Philippines became independent.

TASK FORCE RECOMMENDATIONS
The Task Force recognizes that the authority under the U.S. Constitution to establish a permanent non-territorial status for the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico rests with Congress.

Although the current territorial status may continue so long as Congress desires, there are only two non-territorial options recognized by the U.S. Constitution that establish a permanent status between the people of Puerto Rico and the Government of the United States.

• One is statehood. Under this option, Puerto Rico would become the 51st State with standing equal to the other 50 States.

• The other is independence. Under this option, Puerto Rico would become a separate, independent sovereign nation. The democratic will of the Puerto Rican people is paramount for the future status of the territory. Ideally, the process should begin with an expression from the people of Puerto Rico on whether to maintain current territorial status or establish a permanent non-territorial status with regard to the United States. The popular will of the people should be ascertained in a way that provides clear guidance for future action by Congress. Therefore, the following are the recommendations of the Task Force:

1. The Task Force recommends that Congress within a year provide for a Federally sanctioned plebiscite in which the people of Puerto Rico will be asked to state whether they wish to remain a U.S. territory subject to the will of Congress or to pursue a Constitutionally viable path toward a permanent non-territorial status with the United States. Congress should provide for this plebiscite to occur on a date certain.

2. The Task Force recommends that if the people of Puerto Rico elect to pursue a permanent non-territorial status, Congress should provide for an additional plebiscite allowing the people of Puerto Rico to choose between one of the two permanent non-territorial options. Once the people have selected one of the two options, Congress is encouraged to begin a process of transition toward that option.

3. If the people elect to remain as a territory, the Task Force recommends, consistent with the 1992 memorandum of President Bush, that a plebiscite occur periodically, as long as that status continues, to keep Congress informed of the people’s wishes.


55 posted on 01/23/2006 11:42:07 AM PST by cll (San Juan, PR, USA)
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