Governor Jennifer González recently declared that statehood is a right.

Governor Jennifer González recently declared that statehood is a right.

Governor Jennifer González recently declared that statehood is a right the United States is obligated to grant Puerto Rico. But what she fails to acknowledge is this: statehood is not a right—it is a political decision reserved solely for the United States Congress. The people of Puerto Rico cannot vote themselves into the Union.

For decades, the island has held multiple non-binding referendums to give Puerto Ricans the illusion that their voice matters. But at the end of the day, Congress decides Puerto Rico’s fate—not the people living on the island.

Let’s be honest about the historical facts: Puerto Rico has been a U.S. territory for over 125 years, and for almost 20 of those years, its people had no U.S. citizenship status at all.

González’s statehood campaign follows the political legacy of Luis Muñoz Marín, Puerto Rico’s first elected governor. But the truth is clear: if Congress hasn’t granted statehood after more than a century, it likely never will.

Pundits often blame one political party or the other—claiming that Democrats or Republicans are the true obstacle to statehood. But history tells a different story. Both parties have held full control of Congress, the Senate, and the White House at various points in the past 125 years. Yet neither party has taken serious steps to admit Puerto Rico as a state.

On the other hand, the independence movement, though passionate, has consistently failed to offer a real plan. There is no clear roadmap for a new constitution, a stable economy, global diplomatic recognition, or governance under an independent Puerto Rico.

Both options—statehood and independence—are full of slogans but empty of vision.But what she fails to acknowledge is this: statehood is not a right—it is a political decision reserved solely for the United States Congress. The people of Puerto Rico cannot vote themselves into the Union.

For decades, the island has held multiple non-binding referendums to give Puerto Ricans the illusion that their voice matters. But at the end of the day, Congress decides Puerto Rico’s fate—not the people living on the island.

Let’s be honest about the historical facts: Puerto Rico has been a U.S. territory for over 125 years, and for almost 20 of those years, its people had no U.S. citizenship status at all.

González’s statehood campaign follows the political legacy of Luis Muñoz Marín, Puerto Rico’s first elected governor. But the truth is clear: if Congress hasn’t granted statehood after more than a century, it likely never will.

Pundits often blame one political party or the other—claiming that Democrats or Republicans are the true obstacle to statehood. But history tells a different story. Both parties have held full control of Congress, the Senate, and the White House at various points in the past 125 years. Yet neither party has taken serious steps to admit Puerto Rico as a state.

On the other hand, the independence movement, though passionate, has consistently failed to offer a real plan. There is no clear roadmap for a new constitution, a stable economy, global diplomatic recognition, or governance under an independent Puerto Rico.

Both options—statehood and independence—are full of slogans but empty of vision.

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