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Friday
Apr222005
Friday, April 22, 2005 at 06:30PM
Puerto
Rican legislators who want their island to become a state said Monday
they would try to override a veto of a bill they believe will help
resolve the territory's relationship to the United States. Gov. Anibal
Acevedo Vila on Sunday vetoed the bill, which would have asked
Washington to honor any eventual decision for the island to become a
state, increase its autonomy or become independent. Acevedo Vila said
the measure gave no solid guarantees for the method that he prefers to
resolve the Caribbean territory's status - a constituent assembly that
would decide among the options. The veto infuriated legislators of the
pro-statehood New Progressive Party, which has a majority in both the
52-seat House and the 27-seat Senate. The governor "is disconnected
with the Puerto Rican reality," said Senate President Kenneth
McClintock. Voters supporting statehood were defeated by a slim margin
in previous nonbinding referendums in 1993 and 1998. Less than 5
percent voted for independence. The result has kept Puerto Rico's
commonwealth intact - a situation that has been unchanged since 1952.
The Bush administration has not taken a position on the latest
proposals in Puerto Rico, which the United States seized from Spain in
1898. The island's nearly 4 million people have been U.S. citizens
since 1917. Islanders can serve in the U.S. military but are barred
from voting for president, have no voting representation in Congress
and pay no federal income taxes. [more]