The unsigned ads spotted hanging over some of Puerto Ricoâ€s most-transited routes soon fueled a frenzy of headlines and gossip — which only crescendoed after Bad Bunny, one of the biggest superstars in the world, announced he had bought them to show his love for his homeland. His ads — some of which said that voting for PNP was voting for corruption — were the latest twist in a long-brewing spat that has once again placed the musician front and center of the islandâ€s politics.
#BadBunny is buying billboards saying that a vote for the Statehood party (PNP) in #PuertoRico is a vote for corruption.
.@cpipr just released this investigation https://t.co/IUtFGexA5u pic.twitter.com/QOKneO3l2Y
— Erica G. for Class President (@EG10029) September 24, 2024
Puerto Rican politics donâ€t align neatly with the Democrats vs. Republicans dichotomy of Washington. Instead, the islandâ€s two main parties, the PNP and the Popular Democratic Party (PPD), are divided over Puerto Ricoâ€s status — the former pushing for statehood and the latter for the island to remain a self-governing commonwealth of the United States. A smaller third party, the Puerto Rican Independence Party (PIP), advocates for independence.
That system was “stable for half a century, with the two biggest parties getting approximately 95 percent of the vote in each election,â€� said AmÃlcar Antonio Barreto, a professor of cultures, societies and global studies at Northeastern University. But the past decades — marked by economic stagnation, corruption scandals, a fiscal crisis and a troubled response to a devastating hurricane — have “created a melee and left the political scene in flux,â€� Barreto said.
In recent years, the question of the islandâ€s status has taken a back-seat in the minds of voters, who are more concerned with the issues related to the cost of living, the state of the economy and the quality of life, he added. Thatâ€s why new, smaller parties — such as Movimiento Victoria Ciudadana, which focuses on social justice and battling corruption and the ultraconservative Proyecto Dignidad — have been able to emerge and gain ground.
For the first time in more than seven decades,polls have the “Alianza,â€� a coalition made up by the PIP and Movimiento Victoria Ciudadana, garnering about 20 percent of the vote in the upcoming gubernatorial race. Its candidate, Juan Dalmau is trailing behind PNPâ€s Jenniffer González-Colón, who also serves as the resident commissioner of Puerto Rico, a nonvoting member of the U.S. House of Representatives. The PPDâ€s gubernatorial candidate is polling third.
“Thereâ€s an older cohort of voters in Puerto Rico that are still loyal to the traditional parties — thereâ€s a lot of identity politics at play,â€� Barreto said. “But this is not how young people feel. There is also a lot of disenfranchised, disaffected voters lashing out, and the way theyâ€re doing so is to vote for the nontraditional parties.â€�
“Theyâ€re the ones whoâ€ve seen dwindling opportunities, forcing them to migrate to the mainland,â€� she said. “And Bad Bunny is part of this crisis generation.â€�
During an interview with Puerto Rican YouTuber El Tony earlier this month, Bad Bunny spoke out against voter apathy in Puerto Rico and called on people to register.
“I really care about Puerto Rico,â€� the singer said in Spanish as he swallowed back tears. “Itâ€s good to go out on the streets to protest, to let ourselves be heard as people, but I think that the biggest act of protest is to vote against the people who have led us to this mess on Nov. 5.â€�
A day after the interview aired, hundreds of college students went to a voter registration event at the University of Puerto Rico at RÃo Piedras. In a bleak reminder of the ongoing crisis, the entire school lost power. The next day, though, about 300 students returned and registered to vote, local outlet El Nuevo DÃa reported.
Itâ€s still unclear how much of an effect Bad Bunnyâ€s actions will have in the elections. Last month, Somos Más, an engagement nonprofit, released data revealing that 75 percent of all newly eligible voters under age 21 had not yet registered to vote. The deadline to do so, Sept. 21, has already passed, although there is an effort to extend that window.
The ACLU on Tuesday filed an emergency lawsuit to push the voter registration deadline to Oct. 6 — the latest time frame allowed under Puerto Rican law — given the power outages, the flawed rollout of an online registration system and staffing shortages that have plagued the registration process, the group said.
The problems with voter registration prompted five members of the U.S. House to send a letter Wednesday to the Department of Justice, calling on the agency to send federal poll monitors to oversee the PNP-controlled Commission on Elections†compliance with voting rights laws.
Ã�lvaro Carrillo, 24, is among the thousands of Puerto Ricans that have left the island in recent years, settling in New York City after graduating from college. His long-term goal is to return to “the home I desperately loveâ€� once he gains the experience and skills “that will help me contribute to Puerto Ricoâ€s future.â€�
In Bad Bunnyâ€s billboards, Carrillo sees “a wake-up call not only for the PNP, but for the United States in general, about the legitimate frustrations people have — frustrations and concerns that must be taken seriously or our diaspora will keep on growing.â€�
Earlier this month at the partyâ€s convention, González-Colón walked out to Daddy Yankeeâ€s song “Dura (Remix).â€� And in what appears to be a clear dig at Bad Bunny, she pointed at her ears and started to dance when the songâ€s lyrics of “me como al conejoâ€� — I eat the bunny — resounded inside Puerto Ricoâ€s biggest indoor arena.
@edgar_robles_14 Evidencia que @JGO_FanPage_TikTok ⬠sonido original – Edgar Robles
Shortly after, a member of the party came up with whatâ€s been described online as a “counterattackâ€�: An ad urging people to vote en mass on Nov. 5 “PARA QUE BENITO _AME.â€� The missing letter “mâ€� would make the message read “so Benito can suck it.â€�
Contraataque a Benito. @trschatz51 publica billboards. pic.twitter.com/oBYRRymZs6
— Rafael LenÃn López (@LeninPR) September 25, 2024
In San Juan, 25-year-old Eduardo Alvarado was not exactly shocked by the response from a party he said “is just not attuned to what we Puerto Ricans want and need.�
“I think this shows that theyâ€re scared and that theyâ€ve realized that weâ€re incredibly frustrated by whatâ€s been going on — the corruption, the lack of opportunities, the economic crisis,â€� Alvarado said. “Youâ€d think that theyâ€d be more focused on showing their government plan and trying to solve peopleâ€s problems, but instead theyâ€re beefing with a celebrity.â€�
Even before the ads popped up, Alvarado was already planning on not voting for PNP — but the partyâ€s response, he said, cemented his choice.
“I donâ€t want to vote for a party that doesnâ€t seem to care about our everyday problems and that has to reduce itself to putting up a sign telling Bad Bunny to suck it.â€�
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