http://www.pr51st.com/
Puerto Rico, the 51st State
- Whether it will ultimately become a State or a nation has not been determined.
- The Federal government governs it (even though it has allowed self-government on local matters).
- It does not have votes in Congress or in the election of the President (although its 3.4 million people have one House of Representatives member with a vote in committees as long as he doesn’t break a tie).
- It is treated differently than the States under some laws and can be discriminated against in federal funds allocated to it.
In 2012, 54% of Puerto Ricans said they did not want to be a territory and 61.2% chose statehood. But some local politicians want a new arrangement with benefits of being a state, a nation, and a territory they call “Enhanced Commonwealth status.” Federal officials say it is impossible.
Because the “Commonwealth” politicians refuse to respect the 2012 vote, the President and Congress have provided for a vote under Federal law. Many in Congress have also sponsored bills for a plan to make Puerto Rico a State if statehood wins again.
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