The Diaspora factor: Stateside Boricuas and the Future of Puerto Rico

Falcón, Angelo

NACLA REPORT ON THE AMERICAS report : puerto rico The Diaspora Factor: Stateside Boricuas and the Future of Puerto Rico Angelo Falcón, a political scientist, is president and founder of the...

...This became a practical politi­cal problem for these colonial politicians as the stateside population grew larger and more politically engaged and began in the mid-1960s to demand a voice in determin­ing Puerto Rico’s future status...
...Because they came during the long-term re­gime of the pro-Commonwealth political party, did they support the status quo...
...The status pref­ land’s political been formally a part of the United States since erences of the stateside community may now status remains the annexation of Puerto Rico in 1898 and has be similar to those of Puerto Rico, but this is only speculation...
...In 1986, this division, which now had offices in several states, was seen as a way to create an operation similar to the U.S...
...This became the mechanism by which the government of Puerto Rico tried to steer Puerto Rican la­bor flows and negotiate on workers’ behalf with U.S...
...While there have always been strong connections be­tween Puerto Rico and the stateside Puerto Rican commu­nity through family ties and migration, it wasn’t until the 1990s that this relationship took on an increasingly political nature...
...After a 1965 plebiscite held on the island, the stateside community demanded, with NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2007 report: puerto rico increasing intensity, the right to participate in these votes...
...Under the com­monwealth party, this office collaborated closely with the stateside Puerto Rican political leadership, but under the statehood party the relationship was less friendly and of­ten hostile...
...The stateside Puerto Rican community has been the case in Puerto Rico...
...Well, that’s another story about the failure of a movement and the power of the United States’ new imperialism...
...local, state, and federal authori­ties...
...capital, along with ineffective economic management and multiple corruption scandals...
...This raises challenges to the more traditional state­side Puerto Rican political and economic narratives as a Northeast urban population loyal to the Democratic Party and New Deal policies...
...Israeli lobby, but this has proved hard to emulate in the Puerto Rican case...
...Census estimates, in 2005 there were about 3,780,000 Puerto Ricans living in the States com­pared to about 3,670,000 in Puerto Rico.4 This has generated considerable discussion in Puerto Rico and in the diaspora, signaling that the stateside Puerto Rican community may now be in a position to redefine its relationship to the island...
...Whereas once the major policy agenda for the stateside leadership was the issue of persistent poverty, there are now more voices joining the U.S...
...But whether the diaspora will come down on the side of statehood, commonwealth, or associated republic is not at all clear...
...A majority of voters in that vote, 50.3%, chose “none of the above,” a result of a boycott of the vote by the pro-Commonwealth party, the Popular Democratic Party (PPD), which objected to how their sta­tus option was defined in the ballot...
...Both bills are viewed by opposing island politi­cal parties as biased—Serrano’s toward statehood and Velásquez’s toward a commonwealth victory...
...The outcome of that plebiscite would then be presented to Congress for approval...
...left in focusing the political agenda on the plight of the middle class...
...The Puerto Rico Democracy Act, proposed in February by Representative José Serrano (D-NY), calls for a two-stage referendum in which voters would first be asked whether they prefer to maintain Puerto Rico’s current commonwealth status or pursue a permanent solution...
...This resulted from the growth of the Puerto Rican population and its ability to more ef­fectively use the federal Voting Rights Act in redistricting...
...Pressure to change the mission of this agency in this way came in large part because the divided government in Puerto Rico replicated itself in Washington, D.C., where Resident Commissioner Fortuño is a pro-statehood Republican, while the governor is pro-common­wealth and identified with the Democratic Party...
...Poverty remains a serious problem in the stateside communi­ties of the Northeast and Midwest, but less of a problem in the newer ones in the South and Southwest...
...Although Puerto Ricans have been more open to controversial issues like freeing on this issue...
...The diaspora has always had a problematic relationship with Puerto Rico—a movement of people tied to the failure of the island’s economy...
...In a national Web survey conducted of this elite group in 2006, it was found that 45% supfor the urban underclass, have developed a more lay­ered economic reality over the last couple of decades...
...NACLA REPORT ON THE AMERICAS report : puerto rico The Diaspora Factor: Stateside Boricuas and the Future of Puerto Rico Angelo Falcón, a political scientist, is president and founder of the National Insti­tute for Latino Policy (www.latinopolicy...
...But since then there have been major changes in the social, geographic, and political composition of this community, it is not at all clear what its status preferenc­es are today...
...Especially since the post–World War II great migration, this has been a movement of people tied to the failure of Puerto Rico’s economy, symbolizing a colonial dilemma magnified by its concentra­tion in the world city of New York for so many decades in the 20th century.1 The diaspora has always been a bit of a mys­tery in terms of its attitudes toward its home­land...
...This has made the stateside Puerto Rican recently polled migration...
...Or did their racialization in the United States make them NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2007 report: puerto rico From left: Puerto Rican congressional representatives luis v. Gutierrez (D-Il), José Serrano (D-nY), and nydia velázquez (D-nY) in 2004 support independence?2 And in the end, does this mat­ter to the future of Puerto Rico...
...A lthough puerto ricans have been migrating to the United States since the mid-1800s, it wasn’t until after World War II that the size of this migra­tion became enormous and subject to efforts to manage it from both the colony and the metropolis...
...The out-migra­tion from Puerto Rico as an integral part of its economic 0 1992, which resulted in the new depart­ment being replaced by a lobbying operation called the Puerto Rican Federal Affairs Administration (PRFAA).6 Depending on which political party was in power, this new office’s relationship to the stateside Puerto Rican com­munity changed in dramatic ways...
...During this period, political elites and activists in Puerto Rico increasingly turned to the stateside Puerto Rican lead­ership for support on local issues...
...Whether it was getting favorable U.S...
...Congress now considering proposals for resolving Puerto Rico’s status in the midst of a presidential election, this polarization will only intensify...
...If a permanent solution won, a second plebiscite would ask them to choose between statehood and independence...
...One further complication is that most state­side Puerto Rican leaders and activists support indepen­dence...
...The role of the stateside Puerto Rican community in determining the future political status of Puerto Rico becomes further complicated by new socioeconomic changes and the changing narrative of race in the United States...
...Third, in Puerto Rico the traditional status-based colo­nial political party system has become increasingly difficult to manage, with political deadlock among the parties and the loss of the tax incentives that formerly attracted U.S...
...Today, the major bills before Congress make some provi­sions for the participation of the stateside Puerto Rican community to directly participate in this status-defini­tion process...
...Israeli lobby, and the then pro-common­wealth governor elevated it to the status of the cabinet-level Department of Puerto Rican Affairs in the United States...
...With its policy and political agendas at one of those messy crossroads, it is not particularly clear which road the stateside Puerto Rican community will be taking, now that the issue of its formal participation in resolv­ing the status issue is no longer a matter of debate...
...This is a characteristic of the politics of the diaspora community’s experience that has been little studied or understood, but which continues to have a major impact on its relationship to the politics of its homeland...
...Generally similar in function to foreign consulates, PRFAA differs in technically being a part of the U.S...
...The model for some is the powerful U.S...
...Because they were now participants in the world’s most advanced economy, were they now supporters of statehood for Puerto Rico...
...But along with second-and later-generation The pro-independence preference of a plu­ because they Latinos, Puerto Rican issues have been made rality of the stateside leadership and activists has complicated the process in interesting have not been less visible by the growing attention to the controversial problem of undocumented im­ ways...
...Puerto Rican population has not only increased but has 2 BoB perez NACLA REPORT ON THE AMERICAS report: puerto rico Concentration of Puerto Ricans in the United States development planning, which was based on neo-Malthusian principles, led in l = 1,000 puerto ricans 1948 to the establishment of New York City’s Migration Division of Puerto Rico’s Department of Labor...
...government and in representing people who are all already U.S...
...The most reliable survey conducted on the subject was the Latino National Political Survey (LNPS), conducted in 1989–90.7 It found that more than two thirds (69%) of stateside Puerto Ricans supported commonwealth status...
...He teaches at the Columbia University School of International and Public Affairs...
...One reason for this uncertainty about how Puerto Rico’s political elites related to the stateside Puerto Rican commu­nity was the lack of information about the political status preferences of the diaspora...
...org), based in New York City...
...a problem, had U.S...
...Manifesting itself in myriad parades, festivals, and cultural events through­out the United States, and culminating in early June every year with the massive National Puerto Rican Day Parade in New York City, Puerto Rican nationalism and interest in Puerto Rico remains high...
...Indeed, the stateside Puerto Rican population has al­ways had a problematic relationship with Puerto Rico...
...Stateside Puerto Ricans, once the poster children from this immigration debate, policy makers at all levels of government and in the private sector have difficulty focusing on the specificities of the Puerto Ri­can condition and how it differs from those of new im­migrants and noncitizens...
...2 By Angelo Falcón T he debate over the future political status of Puerto Rico has appeared once again in the U.S...
...With the current divided government, the pro-commonwealth governor, Aníbal Acevedo Vilá, has turned the office into a Washington, D.C.–focused lobbying and public relations operation that has made its relationship to the stateside Puerto Rican community focused on narrowly partisan concerns...
...citizens...
...But new socioeconomic and political developments both stateside and in Puerto Rico have complicated this relationship in ways that make building a common agenda difficult...
...Puerto Rican populations are also growing fast in other parts of the South, in smaller cities, and in suburban and ex-urban areas where a Puerto Rican pres­ence is new...
...House of Repre­sentatives from one to three—two from New York and one from Chicago, all Democrats...
...But while the community’s poverty rate has dropped signifi­cantly over the last 30 years, in 2005 it stood at 23%, compared with 8% for non-Latino whites (for further comparison, in 2006, the poverty rate in Puerto Rico stood at an appalling 45%).9 W hile experiencing a persistent high poverty rate, the stateside Puerto Rican community finds itself challenged to reframe its agenda in ways that may undermine its economic base...
...Meanwhile, Representative Nydia Velázquez (D-NY), who criticized the presidential task force for failing to include Puerto Ricans, introduced the Puerto Rico Self-Determination Act, which calls for the formation of a constitutional con­vention to elect local representatives who would themselves draft the plebiscite to vote among statehood, independence, and a new “enhanced commonwealth” option...
...Congress, raising the ques­tion of what role the nearly 4 million Puerto Ricans living stateside will play in this debate...
...Supporting this relationship was the strong nationalist identity of many stateside Puerto Ricans...
...This new spatial distribution was accompa­nied by new patterns of migration from Puerto Rico and new professional and middle classes moving to these new areas, raising the potential for a new north-south economic polarization whose political implications are yet to be fully clear...
...How can the stateside Puerto Rican community re­ ported independence, while in the 1989–90 LNPS, less than 4% of stateside Puerto Rican adults did.8 It is doubtful that there has been a Knowing how stateside Puerto cast its policy priorities as it also experiences such a potential economic polarization along regional lines...
...Navy out of Vieques, the three state­side Puerto Rican congressional representatives became invaluable, reliable allies, along with many Puerto Rican officials at the state and local levels...
...With the U.S...
...First, as mentioned above, the stateside Puerto Rican congressional delegation doesn’t always agree on cen­tral issues, especially as their seniority increases and their ties to different political sectors in Puerto Rico deepen...
...Second, while historically concentrated in the North­east, especially New York City, and the Midwest, the U.S...
...citizenship since the 1917 Jones Act...
...Two competing House bills, both proposed by Puerto Rican representatives, call for Puerto Ricans to express their preference for statehood, commonwealth, independence, or even for an as­sociated republic in a new plebiscite...
...Independence...
...Navy from Vieques...
...This was short-lived when the statehood party can­didate was elected to the governorship in from Angelo fAlcón, AtlAS of StAteSIde puerto rIcAnS (puerto rIco federAl AffAIrSAdmInIStrAtIon, 2004) become more dispersed during the last two decades.5 In the 1990s the Puerto Rican population in Florida dramati­cally increased, making it the state with the second-largest concentration...
...If the status quo option prevailed, the plebiscite would be repeated every eight years until a permanent option was chosen...
...This perceived difference in perspective between two Puerto Rican politicians from the same party and the same state highlights new complications in the island’s diaspora with regard to the status question, com­plications that make forging a common agenda difficult...
...The successful campaigns to free Puerto Rican political prison­ers, which led to pardons and clemency under presidents Carter and Clinton, demonstrated a level of nationalism that many in the United States found confounding...
...This was buttressed by the “Latin music explosion” starting at the end of the 1990s in which Puerto Rican entertainers played a major role...
...And how will this affect its rela­ large pro-independence surge in the stateside Ricans would tionship to the politics of Puerto Rico and the community since then and more likely that pro-statehood sentiment has grown, as has vote on the is- status question...
...negatively impacted by the racist backlash the Puerto Rican political prisoners and sup­porting the ouster of the U.S...
...federal policies toward Puerto Rico in terms of tax policy or social welfare expenditures, or the cam­paign to get the U.S...
...O ne of the most striking recent developments in the Puerto Rican experience was the realization that in 2003 the size of the stateside Puerto Rican community exceeded that of the island for the first time.3 According to the latest U.S...
...The bill mirrors the recommendations of a report released in December 2005 by the White House Task Force on the Status of Puerto Rico, commissioned by President Clinton and con­tinued by the Bush administration, to reach a permanent solution following the results of the last plebiscite in 1998...
...But knowledge on how stateside Puerto Ricans would vote on the future political status of Puerto Rico remains a problem because they have not been recently polled on this issue, despite extensive polling on it in Puerto Rico...
...It was then that the stateside Puerto Rican commu­nity increased its representation in the U.S...
...Puerto Rico, on the other hand, continues to elect only one nonvoting resident commissioner to Congress (currently Luis Fortuño, a Republican...
...It has also made it easier for the pro-commonwealth party to deal politically with them, while the pro-statehood party finds itself at odds with this large sector of the stateside Puerto Rican political leadership...

Vol. 40 • November 2007 • No. 6


 
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