{"id":1556275,"date":"2024-03-15T14:33:08","date_gmt":"2024-03-15T14:33:08","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/jacobin.com\/2024\/03\/puerto-rican-left-la-alianza-pip-mvc-rafael-bernabe\/"},"modified":"2024-03-15T14:55:41","modified_gmt":"2024-03-15T14:55:41","slug":"a-new-alliance-could-change-puerto-rican-politics","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/2024\/03\/15\/a-new-alliance-could-change-puerto-rican-politics\/","title":{"rendered":"A New Alliance Could Change Puerto Rican Politics"},"content":{"rendered":"\n \n\n\n\n

The Citizens\u2019 Victory Movement and the Puerto Rican Independence Party are forming a coalition called La Alianza. Their goal: a radical shift in Puerto Rican politics.<\/h3>\n\n\n
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\n Public sector workers during a protest demanding higher wages and more pension guarantees in San Juan, Puerto Rico, on February 9, 2022. (Xavier Garcia \/ Bloomberg via Getty Images)\n <\/figcaption> \n<\/figure>\n\n\n\n\n \n

Puerto Rico has been a territory of the United States since the 1898 Spanish-American War. It had only US-appointed governors until 1948, and in 1952, Congress passed a joint resolution that approved its first constitution, which provided for limited autonomy. It would become a \u201cCommonwealth,\u201d but the island remained an unincorporated territory that lacked sovereignty and full rights afforded to US citizens<\/a>, despite the fact that residents of Puerto Rico were granted citizenship in 1917.<\/p>\n

Since then, the island\u2019s politics have revolved around three political parties whose platforms are focused on its political status: the pro-Commonwealth Popular Democratic Party (PDP), the pro-statehood New Progressive Party (PNP), and the pro-sovereign Puerto Rican Independence Party (PIP). Beginning in the 1930s, a series of uprisings by nationalist forces have been met with repression by US agencies (notably the FBI, which maintained extensive files of suspected \u201csubversives\u201d<\/a>), minimizing the voter base for the Independence Party and creating a two-party duopoly consisting of the PDP and PNP.
\nIn the 2010s, the combination of Congress\u2019s imposition of a Fiscal Oversight and Management Board (FOMB) to restructure Puerto Rico\u2019s $72 billion debt and the devastating natural disaster of Hurricane Maria had the effect of shaking the island\u2019s residents\u2019 faith in the two-party duopoly.<\/p>\n

The FOMB made it clear that the local government was not in charge of the island\u2019s finances, neutering the Commonwealth\u2019s illusory autonomy, and the Federal Emergency Management Agency\u2019s (FEMA) poor response to Maria made Puerto Ricans doubt the pro-statehood party. As a result, a new, possibly game-changing element will be a feature of the elections in Puerto Rico this November. The newly created Citizens\u2019 Victory Movement (MVC) and the PIP will form a coalition (called La Alianza)<\/a> to pool their growing constituency in an attempt to further erode, if not destroy, the existing two-party system comprised of the PNP and PDP.<\/p>\n

Earlier this year, I visited Puerto Rico and sat down with the MVC\u2019s Rafael Bernabe, who was elected as senator at-large in 2020, engaging in a dialogue with him about the new alliance. The following is an edited version of our conversation.<\/p>\n\n \n\n \n \n \n

Forming the Alliance<\/h2>\n
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Ed Morales<\/dt>\n \n

The deterioration of Puerto Rico\u2019s economy and the US Congress\u2019s imposition of the FOMB to manage the $72 billion debt crisis<\/a> has led to Puerto Rico\u2019s people losing faith in its traditional electoral politics. What are the conditions that lead to the emergence of the alliance between the MVC and the PIP?<\/p>\n<\/dd>\n \n

Rafael Bernabe<\/dt>\n \n

When you look at what has happened in the past fifteen years in Puerto Rico, it\u2019s not too hard to see the reason La Alianza came about. The economy of Puerto Rico went into a very deep depression in 2005. If you look at the numbers, the economy of Puerto Rico has been in a depression. We have had fifteen years of economic stagnation, no growth whatsoever. About two hundred thousand jobs have vanished; thousands of people have had to leave the island because they can\u2019t find them. They can\u2019t live here. And at the same time, you have all of these terrible corruption cases in the government. The result of that crisis (which people feel very deeply), the fact that the two major parties have not been able to offer any alternative to that crisis, and that they are increasingly corrupt machines has meant that the support for these two political parties is decreasing sharply.<\/p>\n