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            Statehood for Puerto Rico
            As a native Puerto Rican living
            on the mainland, I cannot understand why the question of whether
            or not Puerto Rico becomes a state is an issue. I have many family
            members living on the island and it seems to me to be a "no
            brainer". The benefits of becoming a state are too numerous
            to mention. The next vote should be unanimously in favor of statehood.
            -Andres Velasquez, Sellersburg, Indiana
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      GOP polling shows Puerto Rico to be socially
      conservative. Even so, some want to exclude Puerto Rican born
      Americans from the GOP agenda. If Republicans are unable to reach
      out to diverse communities where there is strong support for
      GOP values, fear of a "downward spiral of House Republicans
      into the next election" may become a self-fulfilling prophecy. 
      
      "Really what this is about is taking
      that fundamental American principle [of self-determination] which
      we are eager to apply around the world and applying it to 4 million
      American citizens who live on . . . Puerto Rico, who served and
      died in defense of America's freedom in disproportionate numbers.
      They deserve the right to become fully free, determine their
      destiny, participate fully, if they choose and how they choose,
      in our democracy." -Senator Joe Lieberman (D-CT) 
      
      Albuquerque Journal, Allentown Morning
      Call, Anchorage Daily News, The Boston Globe, Buffalo News, Chicago
      Tribune, The Clarion-Ledger, Denver Post, The Florida Times-Union,
      The Grand Rapids Press, The Hartford Courant, Intelligencer Journal,
      The Miami Herald, National Association of Hispanic Publications,
      Newsday, The New York Times, Orlando Sentinel, Philadelphia Daily
      News, The Plain Dealer, Portland Oregonian, Portland Press Herald,
      The Post-Standard, The Press-Enterprise, The Providence Sunday
      Journal, San Antonio Express-News, The San Francisco Chronicle,
      The Star-Ledger, St. Petersburg Times, The Sun Herald, Sun-Sentinel,
      The Tampa Tribune, The Tennessean, Times Union, The Washington
      Post, York Daily Record 
      
      Never again are the people of Puerto Rico
      going to be purposely deprived (for political or ideological
      reasons of any local party in power) of their absolute right,
      should they individually choose to exercise it, of a good English
      language education. -Arturo Guzman 
      
      "The Federal government needs to know
      if it is subsidizing an education system in which the students
      of Puerto Rico, who want greater access to English language education,
      are being denied the opportunity." - Rep. Dan Burton (R-IN),
      The English Empowerment Act, H.R. 4766 
      
      Federal taxation could be imposed on commonwealth
      under legislation introduced in Congress requiring the Treasury
      Department to report on Federal Program costs to the island.
      H.R. 4769 
      
      [I]t is possible to show that in 1994,
      the average Puerto Rican had an income of almost $6,000 less
      than the one he would have received, had the Puerto Rican economy
      converged to Mississippi, the poorest state in the Union. Accumulating
      this loss from 1955 to 1994 implies that each Puerto Rican could
      have been $110,000 wealthier by 1994 
      
      [It] is quite understandable that Puerto
      Ricans seek to preserve a cultural sense of identity. In this
      regard, it should be noted that under commonwealth status Congress
      has greater discretion to regulate Puerto Rico's affairs by federal
      law (e.g., current or additional English language requirements)
      than if Puerto Rico was a state or independent nation. If U.S.
      national sovereignty continues, only as a state would Puerto
      Rico have permanent 10th Amendment powers over its non-federal
      affairs, as well as voting power in Congress -Dick Thornburgh 
      
      It is the sense of the Senate that--
      (1) the Senate supports and recognizes the
      right of United States citizens residing in Puerto Rico to express
      democratically their views regarding their future political status
      through a referendum or other public forum, and to communicate
      those views to the President and Congress; and
      (2) the Federal Government should review
      any such communication.
      
      
      
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      Is There a Fifty-First
      Star in America's Future...?
      
      
      Hispanic voters continued their dramatic
      show of strength in the 1998 elections, providing the margin
      of victory for key races across the United States, especially
      in California and New York. LULAC 
      
      Instead of completing the integration process
      through full incorporation and statehood, either independence
      or free association would "dis-integrate" Puerto Rico
      from the United States. This would terminate U.S. sovereignty,
      nationality and citizenship and end application of the U.S. Constitution
      in Puerto Rico. Consequently, there can be no permanent mass
      dual nationality because this would be inconsistent with the
      preservation of the underlying separate sovereignty. -Ambassador
      Fred M. Zeder II 
      
      
      When Hurricane Georges demolished thousands
      of Puerto Rican homes, it also handed supporters of statehood
      a valuable gift: a chance to prove that it pays handsomely to
      be part of the United States. 
      
      The internal churning in the PDP only strengthens
      the NPP's hand against the "None of the Above" vote
      in the plebiscite. Hardcore statehooders see the Dec. 13 vote
      as a way of accelerating history by surpassing the magical 50
      percent margin. They are confident because the PDP is off-balance,
      and they are also confident because they believe the passage
      of Hurricane Georges will boost their stock...[T]he message will
      be crystal clear: permanent union under statehood ensures the
      strong assistance of the United States in times of natural catastrophe;
      separatist options, including "None of the Above",
      will jeopardize that valuable relationship. -Robert Becker 
      
      
      
      UNITED STATES - The independence option
      for Puerto Rico...poses enormous potential risks...and possibly
      significant bail-out costs in the event of political or economic
      crisis. 
      PUERTO RICO - [As] a result of normal investor
      behavior and the aspirations and needs of its citizens, the costs
      of independence would be staggering. 
        
       EXCLUSIVE HERALD WHITE PAPERS 
      
         The record before Congress
      is now clear that permanent union and irrevocable U.S. citizenship
      can not be obtained through commonwealth, even if it is reformed
      as proposed in the 1993 commonwealth definition. Since only statehood
      provides the constitutionally guaranteed status and citizenship
      included in the commonwealth definition, the real question arising
      from the 1993 referendum results is how those who voted for commonwealth
      with permanent union and irrevocable U.S. citizenship intend
      to achieve that result if not through statehood. 
      
         "We will be repeating
      the mistakes of 1952 if we do not inform the people of Puerto
      Rico that individual U.S. citizenship is protected under commonwealth
      for the individual to whom it is already granted against arbitrary
      loss, regulation or restriction, but that the conferral of U.S.
      citizenship in the future is discretionary and could be withdrawn." 
      
      Recent Commentary
      from Puerto Rico 
      Miriam Ramirez de Ferrer, Neftali Fuster, Guillermo
      Moscoso, Robert Becker
      
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