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Saturday
Jan292005
Saturday, January 29, 2005 at 06:27AM
In the long-running debate about the
political status of this U.S. territory, the defining conflict in
island politics, independence long has finished a distant third to
commonwealth and statehood. The failure of the main independence party
to win enough votes in November to stay on the ballot for 2008 seemed
only the latest in a series of setbacks for the movement. But as
Washington signals that the days of commonwealth may be nearing an end,
while questions persist about whether Congress ever will accept this
Spanish-speaking Caribbean island as the 51st state of the union, some
independentistas see events turning in their favor. Which is why a
month after finishing his customary distant third in Puerto Rico's
gubernatorial election, this time with less than 3 percent of the vote,
independence leader Rubén Berríos looked out to his supporters and
declared victory. In the weeks after the November election, volunteers
of his Puerto Rican Independence Party had gathered the signatures of
more than 100,000 island voters -- enough to get the PIP back on the
ballot for 2008. Now Berríos was thanking the faithful for pulling off
the "political feat" that would enable the most prominent
independentista organization in this U.S. territory to retain its
major-party status. [more]