2012 New Progressive Party of Puerto Rico primaries explained

Election Name:New Progressive Party primaries, 2012
Country:Puerto Rico
Type:primary
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2008 New Progressive Party of Puerto Rico primaries
Previous Year:2008
Next Election:2016 New Progressive Party of Puerto Rico primaries
Next Year:2016
Election Date:March 18, 2012
PNP Governor candidate
Before Election:Luis Fortuño
Posttitle:PNP Governor candidate-elect
After Election:Luis Fortuño

The 2012 New Progressive Party primaries were the primary elections by which voters of the New Progressive Party (PNP) chose its nominees for various political offices of Puerto Rico for the 2012 general elections. They were held on March 18, 2012 and coincided with the Republican Party primaries in the island.

Background

At the time of the primaries, the New Progressive Party had already chosen current Governor Luis Fortuño, as their gubernatorial candidate for reelection. He would be joined again in the ballot by current Resident Commissioner Pedro Pierluisi. There was the possibility for a primary between Fortuño and aspiring candidate Iván González Cancel, but he wasn't certified by the Commission. González appealed the decision in the courts, but the case was still pending at the time of the primaries.

In the Senate, there were 14 sitting senators looking to retain their election spots. In the House, there were around 6 sitting at-large representatives as well. Also, some returning candidates from previous years, like Carlos Díaz, and other former officeholders, like María Milagros Charbonier and Zoé Laboy, were entering the political race. Current representative Liza M. Fernández was running for a Senate seat this time, while her husband, Angel Pérez, was running for a representative seat in District 6.

Sitting representative Cristóbal Colón Ruíz was also looking to gain an election spot to be mayor of Patillas, against sitting mayor Benjamín Cintrón. There were fifteen sitting mayor from the PNP that were challenged in primaries.[1]

Also, the amount of primaries per municipality and districts were few, when compared to previous years. As a result, the primaries were expected to be of low participation among the party members.

Candidates

Senate

At-large

District

The New Progressive Party held primaries on 5 of the 8 senatorial districts.

San Juan
Arecibo
Mayagüez-Aguadilla
Guayama
Humacao

House of Representatives

At-large

District

The New Progressive Party held primaries on 18 of the 40 representative districts.

District 4
District 6
District 11
District 14
District 16
District 18
District 19
District 21
District 22
District 25
District 26
District 29
District 31
District 32
District 34
District 35
District 38
District 40

Mayors

The New Progressive Party held primaries in 24 of 78 municipalities.

Aguada

Arecibo

Cabo Rojo

Cayey

Ceiba

Cidra

Culebra

Florida

Guayanilla

Hormigueros

Humacao

Isabela

Jayuya

Loíza

Luquillo

Manatí

Naguabo

Patillas

Salinas

San Sebastián

Toa Alta

Utuado

Vega Baja

Results

Senate

At-large

CandidatePopular votePercentage
Thomas Rivera Schatz234,25917.22%
Margarita Nolasco186,66013.72
Melinda Romero177,99013.08
Itzamar Peña175,59312.90
Larry Seilhamer166,72912.25
Lucy Arce142,74710.49
Héctor Morales135,3819.95
Kimmey Raschke130,4149.58
Others10,8890.82

District

San Juan
CandidatePopular votePercentage
Zoé Laboy18,45939.61%
Liza M. Fernández16,25934.78
Eddie Charbonier11,58124.83
Others3940.78
Arecibo
CandidatePopular votePercentage
Angel Martínez21,30924.50%
José "Joito" Pérez19,75122.43
José Emilio González17,72119.35
Elaine "Tuti" Soler12,23014.03
Edgardo Centeno7,1998.60
Juan Miguel Guzmán6,0057.18
Others3,8843.90
Mayagüez-Aguadilla
CandidatePopular votePercentage
Luis Daniel Muñiz25,27931.63%
Evelyn Vázquez20,33325.44%
Benjamín Velázquez19,91224.91%
Frank Hernández6,0227.53%
Alfredo Ocasio6,1657.71%
Others2,2792.78%
Guayama
CandidatePopular votePercentage
Carlos J. Torres14,79422.66%
Miguelito Rodríguez13,77621.87
Willie Jiménez13,07120.78
Osvaldo Colón13,30820.27
Mara Sáez6,93111.54
Others1,7852.89
Humacao
CandidatePopular votePercentage
Luz M. Santiago18,03232.21%
José Ramón Díaz17,60131.43
Alex Quiñones13,09723.42
Juan Bautista5,88310.53
Others1,4742.40

House of Representatives

At-large

CandidatePopular votePercentage
Jenniffer González229,93016.71%
José "Pichy" Torres Zamora173,97812.65%
José Aponte171,61112.47%
Lourdes Ramos158.93211.57%
María Milagros Charbonier145,89010.60%
José Kikito Meléndez142,94210.42%
José Chico134,9839.81%
Nélson Alonso84,6346.15%
Yumary Peña81,7265.94%
Jorge A. Irizarry38,4012.79%
Others12,760.93%

District

Aftermath

Allegations of fraud

On the same day of the primaries, PPD Electoral Commissioner Eder Ortíz, claimed he had evidence of fraud from the PNP primaries.[2]

Sitting senators losing

Senators Evelyn Vázquez (District IV) and José Emilio González (District III) had their candidatures at risk. Vázquez win over Benjamín Velázquez was close and could go to a recount,[3] while José Emilio González claimed there were irregularities that could have led to his loss.[4]

Representative District 6

There was a lot of controversy surrounding the primaries for the House of Representatives District 6. Both candidates, Angel Pérez and Antonio Soto, have exchanged leads and have been announced as winners after different vote counts.[5] [6] Pérez, who had initially appeared as the loser, claimed there was fraud in the election, and accused Guaynabo mayor, Héctor O'Neill, of orchestrating it.[7] When Pérez was announced as the real winner, O'Neill, who supported Pagán's rival, went into a rant on a radio interview against his own party.[8]

Incumbent mayors losses

Several sitting mayors from the PNP lost their candidacies for the elections. Some of them were Benjamín Cintrón (from Patillas), Lemuel Soto (Arecibo), and Maritza Meléndez (Naguabo).[9]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Colgados seis alcaldes del PNP. Primera Hora. March 19, 2012. Caro, Leysa.
  2. News: Denuncian vaciado de listas y unión de colegios republicanos y PNP. El Nuevo Día. March 18, 2012. Muñíz, Alba.
  3. News: Escaño de Evelyn Vázquez podría ir a recuento. Primera Hora. March 22, 2012. Resto, Mara.
  4. News: José Emilio González cuestiona su derrota. El Nuevo Día. March 19, 2012. Rivera, Daniel.
  5. News: Ahora gana Soto frente a Angel Pérez. El Vocero. March 30, 2012. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120401175445/http://www.vocero.com/ahora-gana-soto-frente-a-angel-perez/. April 1, 2012.
  6. News: Cinco representantes estadistas pierden la reelección. El Nuevo Día. Rosario, Frances. March 19, 2012.
  7. News: Angel Pérez acusa a Héctor O'Neill de robarle la primaria. Primera Hora. March 21, 2012.
  8. News: Al desnudo la manipulación de las primarias. El Nuevo Día. Hernández, Yanira. March 29, 2012.
  9. http://www.telemundopr.com/telenoticias/voto-2012/pnp/Se-cuelgan-varios-incumbentes-penepes-en-las-primarias-143293276.html Se cuelgan varios incumbentes penepés en las primarias