Talk:Popular Democratic Party (Puerto Rico)/Archives/2010/January

Lawmaker urges Ferrer to resolve PDP status dispute
Popular Democratic Party President Héctor Ferrer has a “major problem” in his hands after some party leaders said they will ignore the party’s Governing Board’s determination to reject the associated republic and the association pacts that nations in the Pacific Ocean have made with the United States as paths to develop the commonwealth status, attorney José Alfredo Hernández Mayoral said. One of those party leaders is Juana Díaz Mayor Ramón Hernández Torres who said he will not abide by the governing board’s resolution because it goes against a decision taken by the General Assembly, which is the party’s top organ. “This is something that the party leadership will have to resolve. The party cannot have an official stance and then have some of its leaders saying they will not respect the party’s stance on this issue. This is not a minor problem. This is a major problem that will have to be resolved. Héctor Ferrer cannot allow people to challenge the decisions of the governing board this way,” Hernández Mayoral told WPAB radio. The PDP’s governing board passed in a majority vote a resolution rejecting the associated republic and certain pacts of free association that Pacific nations have with the United States as ways to develop the commonwealth status. Ferrer insists the party still advocates a sovereign commonwealth. Ferrer said the associated republic is a political status that does not exist and that the pacts of free association that certain Pacific islands have with the United States go against Puerto Rico’s reality because they do not include U.S. citizenship. He said the party believes it could do its own pact of association to develop the commonwealth that would grant more powers to Puerto Rico and preserve U.S. citizenship. Hernández Torres said Ferrer should not be speaking on behalf of the party. He said the governing board was required to go first to the general assembly, which had already approved a status resolution, before changing the party’s stance on status options. “I am not going to abide by that determination,” he said in a radio report. Guánica Mayor Martín Vargas — who visited Washington this week alleging to President Obama that PDP mayors were being discriminated against in the distribution of federal stimulus funds — said the party should not be excluding status options. “The party cannot exclude us because they will not win an election. We have a colonial problem in Puerto Rico and if we want to stir a social development we must stir an economic development and that can only be done by granting more powers to the commonwealth because in the current relationship, that has not occurred. We have to negotiate a new pact that will grant more powers to Puerto Rico,” he said. Nonetheless, Vargas said he will take into account the fact that the Legislature wants to approve a new bill that would enable a status vote and make its own commonwealth status definition. “We have to confront that but we all must discuss the formula for the PDP,” Vargas said in a radio report.

--74.213.91.69 (talk) 05:44, 23 January 2010 (UTC)