2016 Puerto Rican general election explained

Country:Puerto Rico
Previous Election:2012 Puerto Rican general election
Previous Year:2012
Next Election:2020 Puerto Rican general election
Next Year:2020
Election Date:November 8, 2016
Module:
Embed:yes
Type:presidential
Election Name:Gubernatorial election
Turnout:55.33% (22.78pp)
Image1:Ricardo Rosselló in 2016.png
Nominee1:Ricardo Rosselló
Party1:New Progressive Party (Puerto Rico)
Alliance1:Democratic Party (United States)
Popular Vote1:660,510
Percentage1:41.75%
Nominee2:David Bernier
Party2:Popular Democratic Party (Puerto Rico)
Alliance2:Democratic Party (United States)
Popular Vote2:614,190
Percentage2:38.82%
Image4:Alexandra Lúgaro in 2016.png
Nominee4:Alexandra Lúgaro
Party4:Independent politician
Popular Vote4:175,831
Percentage4:11.11%
Image5:Manuel Cidre.png
Nominee5:Manuel Cidre
Party5:Independent politician
Popular Vote5:90,494
Percentage5:5.72%
Governor
Before Election:Alejandro García Padilla
Before Party:Popular Democratic Party (Puerto Rico)
After Election:Ricardo Rosselló
After Party:New Progressive Party (Puerto Rico)
Module:
Embed:yes
Type:presidential
Election Name:Resident Commissioner election
Image1:Official portrait of Resident Commissioner Jenniffer Gonzalez (cropped).jpg
Candidate1:Jenniffer González-Colón
Party1:New Progressive Party (Puerto Rico)
Alliance1:Republican Party (United States)
Popular Vote1:718,591
Percentage1:48.59%
Candidate2:Héctor Ferrer
Party2:Popular Democratic Party (Puerto Rico)
Alliance2:Democratic Party (United States)
Popular Vote2:695,073
Percentage2:47.00%
Resident Commissioner
Before Election:Pedro Pierluisi
Before Party:New Progressive Party (Puerto Rico)
After Election:Jenniffer González-Colón
After Party:New Progressive Party (Puerto Rico)

General election were held in Puerto Rico on Tuesday, November 8, 2016, to elect the officials of the Puerto Rican government to serve from January 2017 to January 2021, most notably the Governor of Puerto Rico. Ricardo Rosselló was elected governor and Jenniffer González-Colón was elected Resident Commissioner. The elections saw a 23 percentage point drop in turnout and was the lowest voter turnout in Puerto Rican history.

Rossello would go on to serve a two-year term, having to resign on August 2, 2019, after protests as a result of the Telegramgate scandal. Wanda Vázquez Garced succeeded Rossello.

Candidates

Nominations

Before the election year, the Constitution of Puerto Rico provides for any qualified person to present their candidacy for a specific position. If two or more candidates from the same party present their candidacy for the same position, and they can't reach an agreement within the party, a primary election is held. This election is held within the inscribed members of each party, to select which of the candidates will represent the party in the general election.

Both of the main parties: New Progressive Party (PNP) and Popular Democratic Party (PPD), held primaries for several positions on June 5, 2016.

New Progressive Party (PNP)

See main article: 2016 New Progressive Party of Puerto Rico primaries.

The primaries were held on June 5, 2016, to determine candidates for Governor of Puerto Rico, the Senate, House of Representatives, and others. In the race to be the party's gubernatorial candidate, Ricardo Rosselló defeated Resident Commissioner Pedro Pierluisi

Popular Democratic Party (PPD)

See main article: 2016 Popular Democratic Party of Puerto Rico primaries.

The primaries were held on June 5, 2016, to determine several candidates for the Senate, House of Representatives, and others.

Minor parties

Two minor parties officialized their gubernatorial candidates. The Working People's Party (PPT) nominated Rafael Bernabe once again.[1] The Puerto Rican Independence Party (PIP) nominated María de Lourdes Santiago.

Independents

Two independent candidates expressed their interest in running for Governor:

Governor

The official candidates for the position of Governor of Puerto Rico are:

Alejandro García Padilla, the incumbent governor declined to run for re-election.[4]

Resident commissioner

The resident commissioner of Puerto Rico is the only member of the United States House of Representatives who is elected every four years instead of a two-year term. The resident commissioner and gubernatorial candidates run together as a ticket, like a governor/lieutenant governor ticket would run in the other states, but there are still separate general elections for each position.

The official candidates for the position of Resident Commissioner of Puerto Rico are:

Senate of Puerto Rico

At-large

The ballot featured sixteen (16) candidates from four different parties and one independent candidate (bold denotes incumbent candidates)New Progressive Party (PNP)

Popular Democratic Party (PPD)

Other parties

District

San Juan

Bayamón

Arecibo

Mayagüez-Aguadilla

Ponce

Guayama

Humacao

Carolina

House of Representatives

At-large

The ballot featured sixteen (16) candidates from four different parties (bold denotes incumbent candidates)New Progressive Party (PNP)

Popular Democratic Party (PPD)

Other parties

Results

Governor

The candidate from the New Progressive Party (PNP) Ricky Rosselló beat the candidate from the Popular Democratic Party (PPD) David Bernier obtaining 42% of the votes against 39% for Bernier. Most notably, the two independent candidates – Alexandra Lúgaro and Manuel Cidre – managed to arrive in third and fourth place with 11% and 6% respectively. For the fourth election in a row, the candidate of the Puerto Rican Independence Party (PIP) failed to receive the required 3% of the votes to remain registered. The same result happened to Rafael Bernabe from the Working People's Party (PPT) for the second election in a row. It was the first time since 1964 that one of the two main parties got less than 40%, when PNP was still known as Partido Estadista Republicano and the first time since 1968 a third-party candidate got more than 10% of the vote.[5]

Senate

The numbers of legislators in this senate increased from 27 to 30, because the PNP won 21 of the 27 seats in contention, surpassing the two-thirds limit (18 seats). This automatically triggered Article Three of the Constitution of Puerto Rico which mandates that in such case new seats must be open for minority legislators. These new seats account for the number of seats the majority party surpassed (three seats in this election).

Mayors

Despite losing most of the Senate and the House, the Popular Democratic Party (PPD) managed to win a majority of the mayoralty races in the island, with a total of 45 out of 78 municipalities. The New Progressive Party (PNP) won a total of 33.[6]

Notes and References

  1. News: Bernabe aspirará nuevamente a la gobernación por el PPT. El Nuevo Día. October 25, 2015. November 29, 2015.
  2. News: Abogada Alexandra Lúgaro oficializa su candidatura independiente para la gobernación. Primera Hora. Figueroa, Alex. March 17, 2015. December 1, 2015.
  3. News: Manuel Cidre oficializa candidatura independiente a la gobernación. Metro. December 1, 2015. December 1, 2015.
  4. Web site: Puerto Rico governor will not seek reelection. Yahoo. December 15, 2015. December 15, 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20151222112101/http://news.yahoo.com/puerto-rico-governor-not-seek-reelection-232840409.html. December 22, 2015. live.
  5. Web site: Elections in Puerto Rico: Results Lookup - Islandwide Totals. Elecciones en Puerto Rico / Elections in Puerto Rico. 26 July 2024.
  6. Web site: Informe Estadistico EG2016 - Parte1 . Comisión Estatal de Elecciones Puerto Rico . 15 June 2020 . es . 6 January 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200106041152/http://ww2.ceepur.org/es-pr/Documents/Informe%20Estadistico%20EG2016%20-%20Parte1.pdf . dead .