[JURIST] The US
House of Representatives [official website] voted
223-169 [roll call] Thursday to approve legislation calling for a referendum on the status of
Puerto Rico [BBC backgrounder]. The
Puerto Rico Democracy Act [HR 2499 text, PDF] was introduced by
Resident Commissioner Pedro Pierluisi (D) [official website], Puerto Rico's nonvoting delegate to the House, and had 181 co-sponsors, including nearly 60 Republicans. The bill would establish a two-step referendum, the first of which would ask voters in Puerto Rico whether they wanted to change the status of the island. If the option to change the island's status won, a second referendum would be held, giving voters the option of statehood, independence, "sovereignty in association with the United States," or maintaining the present status. Puerto Rican
Governor Luis Fortuno (R) [official website, in Spanish], along with the leaders of the territorial legislature, have
expressed their support [CNS report] for the bill and eventual statehood.
Representative Nydia Velazquez (D-NY) [official website]
described the bill [press release] as "disgraceful," and "designed to push the statehood agenda, regardless of whether that agenda is ... popular among the people." The vote would be non-binding, and any change to Puerto Rico's status would still
require Congressional approval [AP report]. The bill still requires approval of the US Senate.
In 2008, the
New Progressive Party of Puerto Rico [campaign website, in Spanish], a pro-statehood party whose members primarily affiliate with the US Republican Party, won local elections by a wide margin, winning the offices of governor and resident commissioner and an absolute majority in the territorial legislature. In 2007, The UN
Special Committee on Decolonization [official website]
called on the US [press release] to quickly resolve the island's political status and release political prisoners. Puerto Ricans last voted on the status of the island in
1998 [results], with the "None of the Above" option winning 50.3 percent, statehood garnering 46.5 percent of the vote, and independence only 2.5 percent. Referendums were also held in
1993 and
1967 [results], in which maintaining the current political status won over statehood, and independence placed at a distant third. Puerto Rico is an unincorporated US territory, and its current political status was adopted in 1952, after Congress approved the
Puerto Rican Constitution [text]. The constitution established the island as a US commonwealth, causing the UN General Assembly to
remove [Resolution 748 text, PDF] the island's categorization as a "non-self governing territory." Puerto Ricans have been US citizens since the 1917, and the island has been under US control since 1898.