SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — Legislators prepared to begin an impeachment process for Puerto Rico’s leader as thousands of protesters gathered around the governor’s mansion late Wednesday and chanted, “We want peace, and they want war!” as they demanded his ouster.
Frustration and anger began building as the silence from Gov. Ricardo Rossello stretched late into the night despite promises from his spokesman that the governor would address the island amid widespread anger over disparaging comments that he made about constituents as well as corruption.
“Enough already,” Puerto Rico Rep. Gabriel Rodriguez told The Associated Press. “The people of Puerto Rico on a social level, on an economic level, on an emotional level cannot take it anymore.”
Rodriguez, a member of Rossello’s pro-statehood party, said legislators had initially agreed to set aside the impeachment process and give the governor until 5 p.m. Wednesday to announce that he was going to resign.
“We waited at 5 p.m., 6, then 7, then 8 at night, and it hasn’t happened,” Rodriguez said. “He has to put a stop to this. The only one who can bring peace to Puerto Rico is the governor, today, tonight.”
The only one from Rossello’s administration who spoke Wednesday was Public Affairs Secretary Anthony Maceira, who told reporters around 6 p.m. that Rossello was preparing a message to deliver directly to the people. But the spokesman offered no further details to dozens of reporters gathered outside the governor’s residence for word of his political future.
“Today Gov. Ricardo Rossello will be addressing the people of Puerto Rico directly, in a message that he’s working on right now,” Maceira said.
Thousands of protesters gathered around the governor’s mansion in a renewed push to oust Rossello, and the president of Puerto Rico’s House of Representatives issued the embattled governor an ultimatum: Either take the best decision for a U.S. territory demanding his resignation or face an impeachment process.
Rep. Carlos Mendez spoke shortly after he received a recommendation for legislators to proceed with the impeachment process in a report by a special committee given the task of investigating whether legislators could do so.
“This process will only be detained if the governor takes a decision for the well-being of Puerto Rico,” he said. “We will address this issue with the seriousness it requires.”
Rodriguez said legislators would meet in a special session Thursday afternoon to start the impeachment process.
By Wednesday afternoon, nearly two dozen officers in full riot gear marched out of the governor’s mansion toward protesters. The demonstration remained calm, although protesters led by musicians including Bad Bunny and Residente banged on pots, waved Puerto Rican flags and blew whistles.
“We want peace, and they want war!” the crowd yelled as many became increasingly frustrated that the governor had not spoken yet by late Wednesday night.
Hundreds of thousands of Puerto Ricans have been outraged by leaked, obscenity-laced online chats between Rossello and his advisers, and have protested for nearly two weeks demanding his resignation.
“I hope things will change soon,” said 27-year-old Tanyanette Ortiz from the eastern town of Juncos. “The people have already realized that great things happen if we truly unite.”
The chat participants talked about politics and government contracts and also insulted women and mocked constituents, including victims of Hurricane Maria. Rossello called a female politician a “whore,” referred to another as a “daughter of a bitch,” and made fun of an obese man with whom he posed in a photo.
On Tuesday, officials announced that a Puerto Rico judge had issued search warrants for the cellphones of government officials involved in the chat as part of an ongoing investigation. One of the search warrants said officials used the chat to transmit official and confidential information to private citizens in potential violation of ethics laws.
More than a dozen government officials have resigned since the chat was leaked earlier this month, including Rossello confidant and chief of staff Ricardo Llerandi, former Secretary of State Luis Rivera Marin and former chief financial officer Christian Sobrino, who also held five other positions.
A report issued Wednesday by a special committee tasked with investigating whether legislators could proceed with an impeachment process against Rossello recommended that Puerto Rico’s House of Representatives do so. It is unclear if there are enough votes to do so.
Ortiz’s sister, 17-year-old Kerianette, said she was proud of the situation that Puerto Rico was going through.
“Political parties don’t matter, there are no colors,” she said. “This was a people coming together, and that’s how it should be to have the future we all deserve.”
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