Puerto Rican governor wants referendum on island's status.
Thursday, February 17, 2005 at 12:40AM
TheSpook
Puerto Rican Gov. Anibal Acevedo Vila offered a bill Friday calling for
a referendum to decide a procedure for resolving the political status
of the island, which is currently a U.S. commonwealth. Under his
proposal, Puerto Ricans would go to the polls July 10 to choose between
two options for deciding the status issue: another plebiscite or the
convening of a constitutional assembly. Acevedo, who took office last
month after winning a tight election involving recounts and court
battles, told a press conference at his office that the bill was a way
of living up to his "commitment to address the status situation and to
put the decisions in the hands of the people of Puerto Rico." Of the
two options to be placed before voters in the proposed July referendum,
the one mandating a plebiscite envisions a ballot that includes the
choices of statehood, independence or remaining a U.S. Free Associated
State. The alternative is an assembly of no more than 100
delegates representing a cross-section of both Puerto Rican society and
of opinion on the island's future. The governor did not specify how the
delegates would be chosen. "Said assembly would have to deliver a final
report on the proposal or proposals about the political relationship
between Puerto Rico and the United States that would be taken to the
(U.S.) president and Congress for their consideration and
implementation," according to the governor's bill. Acevedo, whose
Popular Democratic Party favors continuation of Puerto Rico's
commonwealth status, said he had already written President George W.
Bush to explain the referendum plan and ask for support.[more]
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