Muscatine

Say goodbye to the eagle...

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  • mallory
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Future voters? By turning Puerto Rico into our 51st state. That's coming next.


If the people of Puerto Rico feel that full statehood  is better than the current arrangement, I see no reason they shouldn't vote for it.

 

 

 

Some old news:

 

The United States sought today to deny Puerto Rico’s 2.4 million registered U.S. voters their newly awarded right to cast ballots in the upcoming presidential election.

“The Commonwealth [of Puerto Rico] is not a state. … The citizens of Puerto Rico do not have the constitutional right to vote for Presiden and Vice President of the United States.

The United States sought today to deny Puerto Rico’s 2.4 million registered U.S. voters their newly awarded right to cast ballots in the upcoming presidential election.

“The Commonwealth [of Puerto Rico] is not a state. … The citizens of Puerto Rico do not have the constitutional right

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  • mallory
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Please excuse the double post.   While trying to delete it, it was accidentally sent.

Keep calm.

Please excuse the double post.   While trying to delete it, it was accidentally sent.

Keep calm.

There is NO excuse for you.

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  • hiroad
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Puerto Rico Statehood: 5 Reasons Why The Island Won't Become The 51st State

The Huffington Post |                                                                                                 By

Posted: 11/08/2012  6:22 pm EST

 

This week’s vote on Puerto Rico’s status, in which the largest share of votes supported statehood, got a lot of people wondering whether the island territory may become the 51st state.

But don’t hold your breath -- it isn’t likely to happen.

 

The United States first colonized Puerto Rico in 1898. Since then, Puerto Ricans have voted several times on whether to become a state or not, but the idea has never become popular enough to sway a majority of voters.

When statehood received the largest share of votes on Tuesday’s two-part status referendum, it led several U.S. outlets to report that a majority of Puerto Ricans had finally opted for statehood.

It’s a misleading impression. The referendum consisted of two questions. First, it asked voters if they wanted to keep their current U.S. commonwealth status. Dissatisfaction emerged victorious with 52 percent of the vote. The referendum then asked if voters wanted to become a U.S. state, an independent country, or a freely associated state -- a type of independence in close alliance with the United States. Some 61 percent of those who answered the second question chose statehood.

That 61 percent wasn’t the majority, however. Over 470,000 voters intentionally left the second question blank, meaning that only 45 percent of those casting ballots supported statehood. 

“The media in the United States have really taken it the other way, that statehood won, and that’s not true,” historian Angel Collado-Schwartz told the Huffington Post.

Even without a majority, Puerto Rico is forwarding the results to Congress and the White House, which will decide whether to launch the process of turning Puerto Rico into to the 51st state in the union.

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