Puerto Rican Independence Party
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| Partido Independentista Puertorriqueño PIP - Puerto Rican Independence Party |
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| Leader | Rubén Berríos Martínez |
| Founded | October, 1946 |
| Headquarters | San Juan, Puerto Rico |
| Official ideology/ political position |
National Liberation Movement, Social liberalism, Social democracy, Pan-Latin Americanism |
| International affiliation | Socialist International (SI) |
| Official colour(s) | Green & White |
| Website | Official Website of the Puerto Rican Independence Party: www.independencia.net/ingles/welcome.html |
The Puerto Rican Independence Party (Spanish: Partido Independentista Puertorriqueño, PIP) is a Puerto Rican political party that campaigns for the independence of Puerto Rico from the United States. It is one of the three main Political Parties in Puerto Rico and second oldest among all registered parties.
Those who follow the PIP ideology are usually called independentistas, pipiolos, or sometimes just pro-independence activists in the anglosphere.
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The party began as the electoral wing of the Puerto Rican pro-independence movement. It is the largest of the independence parties, and the only one that is on the ballot during elections (other candidates must be added in by hand).
The party was founded on October 20, 1946 by Gilberto Concepción de Gracia (deceased in 1968). He felt the independence movement had been "betrayed" by the Partido Popular Democrático, whose ultimate goal had originally been independence.
In 1971, the newly elected PIP governor candidate, Rubén Berríos, then 31, led a protest against the U.S. Navy in Culebra. At that time, he was found guilty of trespassing federal lands and incarcerated for three months at Fox River State Penitentiary (see also: Navy-Culebra protests). During the 1972 elections the PIP showed the largest growth in its history while running a socialist, pro-worker, pro-poor campaign. One year later during a delegate assembly Ruben Berrios declared that the party had no space for Marxism, thus expelling all of the members of a faction called the "terceristas". This group would eventually create the Socialist Popular Movement, an ancestor to the Socialist Workers Movement.
In 1999, PIP leaders, especially Rubén Berríos, became involved in the Navy-Vieques protests started by many citizens of Vieques against the presence of the U.S. military in the island-municipality (see also: Cause of Vieques).
During the 2004 elections, the PIP was in serious danger of disappearing, obtaining only 2.4% of the gubernatorial vote and 10.5-25.5% of the legislative vote(According to the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico electoral laws, a party that receives less that 3% of the vote is considered eradicated). Popular island-wide support for the PIP hovered around 10% and the PIP elected one Senator and one Representative who are the respective spokepersons for the Puerto Rican Independence Party at the Puerto Rico Senate and the Puerto Rico House of Representatives. Nevertheless, the party's historic leader, Rubén Berríos, announced that if that happened, party leaders and its wide-periphery constituency would make sure that it would be quickly re-instated. True to his commitment, in less than a couple of weeks the PIP's leadership and its membership obtained more than one-hundred and five thousand notarized signatures (105,000) from Puerto Rico's able voters. On a positive note, María De Lourdes Santiago made history that year by becoming the first female member of the PIP to be elected to the Puerto Rico Senate. Victor Garcia San Inocencio, for his part, was re-elected for a third term at the Puerto Rico House of Representatives where he has served as a Representative and PIP Spokesperson since January of 1997.
As reported in the Canadian press, for the past half-decade, the PIP's leadership and active members have participated in anti-war protests and mobilization to resist the war in Iraq and oppose the U.S. government's efforts to encourage Puerto Ricans to enlist in the U.S. Armed Forces: "The Puerto Rican Independence Party five years ago began distributing leaflets encouraging high school students to prevent military recruiters from obtaining their personal information. Last year, 57 per cent of this Caribbean island's high-school sophomores, junior and seniors signed the forms to keep their information from recruiters.[1]
The PIP's symbol is a green flag with a white cross; because of this, it is identified as the green party, both with the voting public and in the election ballots.
To the PIP, the green color signifies hope of becoming free, and the white cross, the sacrifice and commitment of the party with democracy.
"Nordic Cross" flag, or "Latin cross" flags are a common design in Scandinavia and other parts of the world, and in theory, the PIP's emblem belongs to this family of flags. The PIP's flag is based on the first national flag ever flown by Puerto Ricans, and the current flag of the municipality of Lares. Lares hosted the first relatively successful attempt of revolutionary insurgency in Puerto Rico, the Grito de Lares, in September 23, 1868. The Lares flag is, on the other hand, similar to that of the Dominican Republic, since the Grito's mastermind, Ramon Emeterio Betances, not only admired the Dominican pro-independence struggle, but was also a descendant of Dominicans himself. The Dominican flag was in turn adopted from a French military standard.
U.S. Citizens residing in Puerto Rico are not counted in the U.S. Census and lose their right to vote in any U.S. legislative and executive election at the national level that (despite the fact that the U.S. Government Executive and Legislative Branches hold ultimate sovereignty over all U.S. Citizens and the territory of Puerto Rico. Both the Puerto Rican Independence Party and the New Progressive Party outright reject the status quo that permits disfranchisement (from their distinct respective positions on the ideal enfranchised status for the island-nation of Puerto Rico). The remaining political organization, the Popular Democratic Party, is less active in its opposition of this case of disfranchisement but has officially stated that it favors fixing the remaining "deficits of democracy" that the William Jefferson Clinton and George W. Bush Administrations have publicly recognized in writing through Presidential Task Force Reports.
Many among the general public have associated the Independence parties, including the Partido Socialista Puertorriqueno with violent acts of terrorism such as those committed by Los Macheteros. However, the party has never acknowledged links to any attacks, insisting that they want independence through peaceful means, and no proof has ever been found to corroborate these allegations. The PIP has participated in frequent congresses of international non-Marxist socialist parties.
- Rubén Berríos, Esq. - President, former Senator and Honorary President of the Socialist International (SI)
- Manuel Rodríguez Orellana, Esq. - Secretary of Relations with North America
- Fernando Martín, Esq. - Executive President, former Senator
- María De Lourdes Santiago, Esq. - Vice-President and PIP Senator at the colonial Senate of Puerto Rico
- Juan Dalmau Ramírez, Esq. - Secretary General & Electoral Commissioner
- Prof. Edwin Irizarry Mora, Ph.D. - Secretary of Economic Affairs
- Roberto Iván Aponte - Secretary of Municipal Organization
- Dr. Luis Roberto Piñero - President of the Pro-Independence Advocates' Campaign in favor of unifying both Houses of the Legislature into a single, unicameral colonial Parliament
- Victor García San Inocencio, Esq. - PIP Representative at the colonial House of Representatives of Puerto Rico
- Jorge Fernandez Porto, M.S., Adviser on Environmental Sciences and Public Policy Affairs
- Jessica Martínez, Esq. - Member of Pro-Independence Advocates' Campaign in Favor of a single, unicameral colonial Parliament
- Dr. Gilberto Concepción de Gracia - Founding President and Respected Latin American Leader
- Latin American and Caribbean Congress in Solidarity with Puerto Rico’s Independence
- Puerto Rico political parties
- Cause of Vieques
- Maravilla Hill case
- Navy-Culebra protests
- Navy-Vieques protests
- Politics of Puerto Rico
- Socialist International
- Puerto Rican Independence Party (1998). Retrieved January 6, 2004 from www.independencia.net/ingles/welcome.html
- [www.independencia.net/ingles/welcome.html Official Website of the Puerto Rican Independence Party]
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| Registered parties | New Progressive Party - Popular Democratic Party - Puerto Rican Independence Party - Puerto Ricans for Puerto Rico Party |
| Other parties | Hostosian National Independence Movement - Socialist Front - Socialist Workers Movement |
| Portal:Politics - List of political parties - Politics of Puerto Rico | |
Categories: Articles needing additional references from November 2007 | Independentist parties | Political parties in Puerto Rico | Social democratic parties | Political parties established in 1946 | Political advocacy groups in Puerto Rico | National liberation movements | Secession | 1940s establishments | Political history of Puerto Rico | 20th century establishments | Secession in the United States | Secessionist organizations | Politics of the Americas | Politics of the Caribbean | Sovereignty movements | Nationalist movements | Latin American and Chicano Nationalism | Nationalist organizations | Political parties in the Caribbean