Republican Party of Puerto Rico explained

Republican Party of Puerto Rico
Native Name:Partido Republicano de Puerto Rico
Chairperson:Angel M. Cintrón
Foundation:1899
Headquarters:San Juan, Puerto Rico
Ideology:
Puerto Rican statehood
Position:Center-right to right-wing
National:Republican Party
Colors: Red
Country:Puerto Rico

The Republican Party of Puerto Rico (Spanish; Castilian: '''Partido Republicano de Puerto Rico''') is the local affiliate of the national United States Republican Party in Puerto Rico. The affiliation started in 1903.[1] The party does not participate in the November elections mandated by the Constitution of Puerto Rico for local registered political parties because it is not a registered party in Puerto Rico for local electoral purposes.[2] Instead, the party holds its own elections to select the Puerto Rico delegates to the Republican National Convention and holds presidential primaries on the last Sunday of February.

The Republican Party of Puerto Rico's ideology supports statehood for Puerto Rico. Congresswoman Jenniffer González-Colón, resident commissioner of Puerto Rico, is the current local party chairperson.[3] [4] The local affiliate is based in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

History

The origin of the Republican Party of Puerto Rico can be traced to the aftermath of the Spanish–American War. Once the Spanish–American War came to an end in 1898, Puerto Rico became a territory of the United States. At that point, the former Spanish colonial-era parties that existed in Puerto Rico were forced to redefine themselves given the new political reality created by the change in sovereignty. On July 4, 1899, the dissenting wing of one of such parties, the Partido Autonomista (Autonomist Party), which had just formed Partido Autonomista Ortodoxo in 1897, founded a party with an ideology of annexation to the United States and called it Partido Republicano de Puerto Rico (Republican Party of Puerto Rico). This new party favored joining the United States as a federated state and was led by Dr. José Celso Barbosa. In 1903 the Republican Party of Puerto Rico affiliated itself with the U.S. Republican Party.

In 1924 Partido Republicano de Puerto Rico split into two factions: one faction joined with the Union Party to form the Alianza (The Alliance), a pro-autonomy group, and the other faction, renamed itself Partido Republicano Puro (Pure Republican Party) and joined with the Socialist Party to form the pro-statehood Coalición (The Coalition).[5] The 1924 split brought Partido Republicano de Puerto Rico to an end,[6] and Coalición became the de facto pro-statehood ideology.

Ideology

The Republican Party of Puerto Rico believes in equal and full citizenship rights for U.S. citizens of Puerto Rico, and that this can only be achieved through statehood for Puerto Rico.

Republican presidential primaries 2016 results

CandidatesRecent positionsLogoIsland delegatesPopular voteSenatorial districts

Donald Trump
Chairman of The Trump Organization(1971–2017)05,052 (13.1%)[7] None

Ted Cruz
U.S. Senator from Texas(2013–present)03,340 (8.6%)None

Marco Rubio
U.S. Senator from Florida(2011–present)20 Delegates27,485 (71.0%)All 8 districts
Other Candidates01,356 total votesNone
Official Result by Puerto Rico's State Election Commission

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Bolívar Pagán. Historia de los Partidos Politicos de Puerto Rico, 1898-1956, Tomo I. San Juan, Puerto Rico: Librería Campos. 1959. pp. 113-114.
  2. http://www.thegreenpapers.com/slg/PR.html#sei The Green Papers: State and Local Government: Statutory Election Information.
  3. Web site: Biografía – Hon. Jenniffer A. González Colón . . 2015-12-23 . es .
  4. Web site: Jenniffer González se muestra decepcionada con decisión de Trump que afecta a la isla . El Nuevo Día . 2019-09-05 . es . 2021-08-20.
  5. Bolívar Pagán. Historia de los Partidos Politicos de Puerto Rico, 1898-1956, Tomo I. San Juan, Puerto Rico: Librería Campos. 1959. p. 239.
  6. Ileana M. Rodriguez Silva. Silencing Race: Disentangling blackness, colonialism, and national identities in Puerto Rico. Palgrave Macmillan. 2012. p. 19.
  7. Web site: Puerto Rico Republican Delegation 2016. www.thegreenpapers.com. 2016-03-07.