by Bill Sloat
11.29.2012
State Rep. Alicia Reece only local legislator listed as co-sponsor
A group
of Ohio House Democrats wants Congress to move quickly and grant
statehood to Puerto Rico, which has been a U.S. possession since the
Spanish-American War ended in 1898. The
Ohioans do not say where the star should go on a redesigned American
flag, but they said statehood would “respect the rights of
self-governance through consent of the governed of our fellow United
States citizens residing in Puerto Rico.”
The chief
sponsor of the resolution, H.C.R. 57, is State Rep. Dan Ramos of Lorain,
a northern Ohio city where about 25 percent of the 64,000 residents are
Hispanic. Lorain is considered the most Hispanic city in Ohio, and nearly 20 percent of its population claims Puerto Rican descent. The resolution urging statehood was introduced this week in the Ohio House where it likely faces an uncertain future. The current term of the legislature is scheduled to end in December, and it has no Republican co-sponsors. The GOP controls the House, which means that Democratic proposals often get bottled up or receive short shrift.Earlier this month, a slight majority of Puerto Ricans voted in favor of statehood for the Caribbean Island. It was the first time a statehood referendum has won there,
and the non-binding vote was seen as signaling that many Puerto Ricans
appear ready to end the island’s status as a U.S. commonwealth. The move by the Ohio House Democrats also appears aimed at cementing the party’s support among Hispanic voters. Some
70 percent of Hispanics backed the Democrats and President Obama on Election
Day, and Hispanics are emerging as a key bloc with increasing power at
the ballot box.
With the
exception of State Rep. Alicia Reece, a Cincinnati Democrat, all of the
other House Democrats backing the statehood resolution are from Columbus
or further north in Ohio. The resolution urges Congress to take swift action “towards admitting the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico to the Union as a State.” Statehood decisions are up to Congress. The
Ohio resolution points out that Puerto Ricans are already U.S. citizens
(although they cannot vote in presidential elections), and that many
serve in the U.S. military. A 1917 law granted residents U.S. citizenship.
There is a historical footnote involving Cincinnati in Puerto Rico’s fate. Former
GOP President William Howard Taft, a Cincinnatian who went on to serve
as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court in the 1920s, delivered a major
legal decision in 1922 that helped keep Puerto Rico separate. Taft
said the congressional act that conferred citizenship on the islanders
did not contemplate that they would be incorporated into the Union. He ruled the U.S. possession had never been designated for statehood. Taft gave the island a unique status that has been described as a commonwealth, or as it is said in Spanish, “Estado Libre Asociado de Puerto Rico.”