The Commentariat -- May 17, 2020
The New York Times' live updates of coronavirus developments Saturday are here. The Washington Post's live updates for Saturday are here.
Audra Burch & John Eligon of the New York Times: "... former President Barack Obama delivered a virtual commencement address on Saturday, urging thousands of graduates at historically black colleges and universities 'to seize the initiative' at a time when he says the nation's leaders have fumbled the response to the coronavirus pandemic. The speech combined the inspirational advice given to graduates with pointed criticism of the handling of a public health crisis that has killed more than 87,000 Americans and crippled much of the economy.... Mr. Obama's remarks ... also appeared to be an effort to comfort and assure an American public divided by President Trump's handling of the crisis. The former president also used the moment to attempt to rally the nation in an election year around values historically championed by Democrats like universal health care, and environmental and economic justice." ~~~
~~~ New Lede: "Without the springtime rituals of traditional graduation ceremonies, former President Barack Obama delivered two virtual commencement addresses on Saturday, urging millions of high school and college graduates to fearlessly carve a path and 'to seize the initiative' at a time when he says the nation's leaders have fumbled the response to the coronavirus pandemic." ~~~
~~~ Veronica Stracqualursi of CNN: President "Obama on Saturday criticized the handling of the coronavirus pandemic without mentioning ... Donald Trump by name, just a week after privately critiquing the administration's response to the Covid-19 crisis. ~~~
~~~ Zeeshan Aleem of Vox: "And much of his advice encouraging students to become leaders doubled as an indictment of the Trump administration's management of the pandemic.... On the whole, Obama struck his signature tone of calm and measured optimism, and used the country's current economic and public health crises as springboards for discussing his usual political themes, including the importance of community organizing and finding common ground outside of comfort zones. And he also emphasized the unique injustices faced by young black people like Ahmaud Arbery at a time when some political leaders are arguing that coronavirus is an equalizer of sorts.... The speech won't be Obama's final commencement address in 2020 — his next graduation speech, to high school seniors, will take place Saturday at 8 pm ET, and he will deliver a third address to 2020 graduates at 3 pm ET on June 6." ~~~
~~~ Mrs. McC: Obama's political radar is still near-perfect. What a guy! Please put him on the Supreme Court, Joe, if he'll do it. Otherwise, Secretary of State. Earth would swoon. The New York Times has the full transcript here. The page does have video of Obama's HBCU speech, but you have to find it. Here's a clip: ~~~
~~~ Here's President Obama's speech to high-school graduates:
~~~ Edward Moreno & Justine Coleman of the Hill: "College graduates are poised to enter one of the most difficult job markets in U.S. history. Nearly 4 million people are expected to graduate with a college degree this academic year, according to the National Center for Education Statistics. They will do so amid soaring unemployment and shuttering businesses."
MEANWHILE. Trump Cheers Militant Protesters. Daniel Politi of Slate: "... Kevin Vesey, a reporter with News 12 Long Island, posted a video of what he experienced at an anti-lockdown protest in Commack, N.Y., earlier this week.... At one point, a maskless protester gets close to Vesey. 'I think you need to back away,' Vesey can be heard saying in the video. 'No, I've got hydroxychloroquine,' the protester says as he continues to approach Vesey. 'I'm fine.'... If you haven't seen it yet, Vesey's video is shocking in its rawness. The reporter films as demonstrators, many of whom are wearing Trump paraphernalia..., repeatedly heckle him and outright insult him as he walks among them.... On Friday night ... Donald Trump joined those praising the protesters who made it difficult for Vesey to do his job.' FAKE NEWS IS NOT ESSENTIAL!' Trump tweeted as he shared the video. On Saturday the president again shared the video, which includes a protester giving the reporter the finger, while he praised the demonstrators as 'great people!'"
The Reckoning. Dan Balz of the Washington Post: "The government's halting response to the coronavirus pandemic represents the culmination of chronic structural weaknesses, years of underinvestment and political rhetoric that has undermined the public trust -- conditions compounded by President Trump's open hostility to a federal bureaucracy that has been called upon to manage the crisis. Federal government leaders, beginning with the president, appeared caught unaware by the swiftness with which the coronavirus was spreading through the country.... Even after the machinery of government clanked into motion, missteps, endemic obstacles and lack of clear communication have plagued the efforts to meet the needs of the nation.... This hollowing out has been going on for years as a gridlocked Congress preferred continuing resolutions and budgetary caps to hardheaded decisions about vulnerable governmental infrastructure and leaders did little to address structural weaknesses. The problems have grown worse in the past three years."
The Edward Luce piece of the Financial Times linked yesterday -- "Inside Trump's Coronavirus Meltdown" -- previously firewalled, is now free to read. --s
"Refusing to Wear a Mask Is a Uniquely American Pathology." Dahlia Lithwick of Slate explores how right-wing men, especially, have confused First Amendment rights with the right to expose others to the coronavirus. "The simplest explanation for the insistence that wearing masks is for thee, but not for me, rests in the fundamental narcissism of Donald Trump, and the booming cottage industry on the part of right-wing media in so-called vice-signaling—the performative acting out of malice and cruelty toward the weak." ~~~
~~~ Well, Not Entirely American. Shaun Walker of the Guardian: "With the news this week that Vladimir Putin's press secretary, Dmitry Peskov, is in hospital with Covid-19, the virus has now penetrated the Kremlin, 10 Downing Street, the Palácio do Planalto and the White House. Putin, Boris Johnson, Jair Bolsonaro and Donald Trump ... have had one thing in common in their responses to coronavirus: a belief or suggestion, at least in the early stages, that taking personal protective measures against the virus is somehow unseemly and at odds with their macho political brands."
"The Era of Stupid." Michael Cohen of the Boston Globe: "I have a suggestion for how we should define the Trump Years: The Era of Stupid.... There are so many 'stupid' examples one can choose from: Sharpie-gate; the president's talk of buying Greenland; his musing on whether it's possible to nuke a hurricane or inject people with disinfectants; his refusal, aped by many of his followers, to wear a mask in the midst of a global pandemic. The list goes on and on. But president's latest fixation is perhaps Peak Stupid -- 'Obamagate.'... Because we live in the Era of Stupid, many people seem primed to believe this bad thing they can't actually describe. The president said it's true. So did Tucker Carlson, Rush Limbaugh, and Sean Hannity..., The result is an entire political ecosystem devoted to the propagation of stupid.... Alas, this is the time in which we are living; when the stupid, mindless, and inane have not just entered the political mainstream, but have come to define it. All of us, whether we believe it or not, are stupider as a result." --s
Isaac Scher of Business Insider: "Last month, Russia sent the United States a shipment of Aventa-M ventilators, saying they could help with the nationwide shortage. But now, the US Federal Emergency Management Agency says the ventilators won't be used after the model has been blamed for fatal fires.... On Tuesday, a fire broke out in the intensive care unit of a St. Petersburg[, Russia,] hospital, killing five coronavirus patients. A similar fire was started in a Moscow hospital three days earlier, killing one coronavirus patient..., Russian health officials have also banned the Aventa-M ventilators in the aftermath of the fires.... Reuters previously reported that the ventilators were manufactured by a Russian firm under US sanctions." --s ~~~/p>
~~~ Carla Babb of VOA: "The United States will donate 200 medical ventilators to Moscow via U.S. military transport beginning next week, to aid against the worsening coronavirus outbreak in Russia.... The U.S. government is donating 100 percent of the cost of the ventilators, their start-up components and their delivery expenses, which officials said totals roughly $4.7 million." --s Bob Bland in a USA Today op-ed: "One month ago ... a small group of volunteers came together to found >Masks for America and teamed up with leading health care activist Ady Barkan's Be A Hero Fund
Cronyism. Jake Pearson of Mother Jones: "An Omaha, Nebraska-based private jet company [Jet Linx Aviation, which caters to well-to-do CEOs and executives] whose principal owner [Vice Chairman John Denny Carreker and his wife, Connie] donated generously to Donald Trump and Republicans ahead of the 2016 election received $20 million in taxpayer aid from the federal bailout package passed in March.... CNBC reported on Thursday that Clay Lacy Aviation, a Van Nuys, California-based private jet company whose founder has given nearly $50,000 to the Republican National Committee and Trump, got $27 million in federal funds.... [O]f the roughly 2,000 private jet companies operating in the U.S..., they received about $157 million in taxpayer aid, less than a percent of the more than $23 billion disbursed so far for the passenger airline industry." --s
Alaska. Argumentum ad Hitlerum. Meet Your Elected Official. Hannah Knowles & Candace Buckner of the Washington Post: "The uproar began when an Alaska lawmaker emailed all 39 of his statehouse colleagues to compare health-screening stickers to the badges that singled out Jews during the Holocaust.... [State] Rep. Ben Carpenter (R) wrote Friday, sharing his dismay at a new requirement for legislators returning to the Alaska Capitol amid the novel coronavirus pandemic[:] 'Are the stickers available as a yellow Star of David?' The backlash was swift: 'Ben, this is disgusting,' one Jewish representative wrote back.... 'I don't think a tag that we're cleared to enter the building is akin to being shipped to a concentration camp,' responded another. The leader of the state House's Republican delegation said Carpenter should apologize. But Carpenter dug in. 'Can you or I -- can we even say it is totally out of the realm of possibility that covid-19 patients will be rounded up and taken somewhere?' he said later in an interview with the Anchorage Daily News, arguing that officials are overreacting to the virus with limits on people's liberty. 'People want to say Hitler was a white supremacist. No. He was fearful of the Jewish nation, and that drove him into some unfathomable atrocities.' That provoked a new round of denunciations from fellow lawmakers...."
Maine. A Florida Man Delivers Protest Speech from Lexus. Charles Eichacker of the Bangor Daily News: "Former governor Paul LePage briefly returned [link fixed] to Blaine House on Saturday for a protest of the business restrictions that its current occupant, Gov. Janet Mills, has put in place to prevent the spread of the coronavirus. LePage did not even appear to leave the vehicle -- with its Florida plates -- that he drove to the rally. Instead, in what may have been a way to avoid violating Maine's requirement that out-of-state visitors remain in quarantine for two weeks after arriving here, he parked the Lexus sedan in a small lot next to the Blaine House and used his cell phone to address a gathering of protesters about 40 feet away. Then, he pulled out of the lot and appeared to drive off[.]" --s
Michigan. Corey Williams of the AP: "A man accused of making credible death threats against Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and Attorney General Dana Nessel has been charged on a terrorism count, the Wayne County prosecutor's office said Friday. Robert Tesh made the threats via a social media message to an acquaintance on April 14 and authorities concluded the message amounted to 'credible threats to kill,' prosecutor Kym Worthy said Friday in a news release." ~~~
~~~ Violet Ikonomova of Deadline Detroit describes Tesh as a "downtown Detroit real estate agent.... Online profiles and old media reports describe him as a real estate agent who was formerly marketing director for Downtown Realty. He's no longer with the brokerage after being fired in 2018 for failing to show up to work several days in a row, said owner Larry Else." Mrs. McC: I've now seen two photos of Tesh, and he looks creepy in both of them.
Texas. The State's Justices Want Texans to Die. Chris Boyette & Kelly Mena of CNN: "The Texas Supreme Court issued a stay Friday evening to keep county election officials from allowing voters who are afraid of catching coronavirus to vote by mail. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton asked the court to step in Wednesday, arguing that election officials are 'misapplying' the state's 'disability' requirement for absentee mail-in voting amid the pandemic. Paxton, a Republican, filed a petition for Dallas, Cameron, El Paso, Harris and Travis counties. The court will hear the case on May 20 as the next state election fast approaches. Amid the coronavirus pandemic, Democrats and voting rights groups have pushed for states to expand vote-by-mail access. Those calls have been met with resistance from Republicans, who favor stricter measures that they argue ensure the integrity of the electoral process. The next election date in Texas is July 14 for a primary runoff election. The last day to apply for a mail-in ballot is July 2. The Texas Democratic Party filed a lawsuit in late March, asking a judge to allow that a Texas election provision allowing voters to cast a mail-in ballot if they suffer from a disability apply to any voter who feared for their health amid the coronavirus pandemic. On April 17, Travis County District Judge Tim Sulak issued a temporary injunction allowing any voter with coronavirus concerns to use the 'disability' election provision to request a vote-by-mail ballot. Paxton immediately filed an appeal...." ~~~
~~~ Gina Sunseri & Ella Torres of ABC News: "Texas has seen a steady rise in novel coronavirus cases and fatalities since reopening just over two weeks ago.... While the cases are still well below New York..., the steady increase shows that the curve has not yet flattened in Texas.... Hospitalizations rates have appeared to flatten, but that data is reported on a two-week lag.... Gov. Greg Abbott's communications director John Wittman told ABC News that the amount of testing has doubled since reopening, contributing to the rise in cases."
Karoina Modig of NBC News: "... on homemade placards at anti-lockdown protests in the last month, an unusual slogan has been spotted: 'Be more like Sweden.' Prominent Republican Party figures and GOP-supporting commentators have praised Sweden for its light-touch approach to the coronavirus pandemic -- it is almost unique among nations in not ordering citizens to stay indoors, while cafes and restaurants have stayed open.... But ... the Swedish Public Health Agency's strategy is based on trying to slow the spread of the virus as much as possible, not on keeping the economy going. The Swedish economy, heavily dependent on the global supply chain, is suffering just as much as many other countries. The decision to keep schools open was about freeing up health care workers to deal with the pandemic, not to stimulate the economy[.]... All Swedes have access to health care regardless of their income or ability to pay, and lifting a lockdown in the country would not leave the poor much more vulnerable to disease." ~~~
~~~ Lauren Leatherby & Allison McCann of the New York Times (May 15): Sweden's "moderated response to the coronavirus outbreak has drawn praise from some American politicians, who see Sweden as a possible model for the United States as it begins to reopen. 'We need to observe with an open mind what went on in Sweden, where the kids kept going to school,' Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky, a Republican, said at a hearing on Tuesday. But while Sweden has avoided the devastating tolls of outbreaks in Italy, Spain and Britain, it also has seen an extraordinary increase in deaths, mortality data show. In Stockholm, where the virus spread through migrant communities, more than twice the usual number of people died last month. That increase far surpasses the rise in deaths in American cities like Boston and Chicago, and approaches the increase seen in Paris. Across Sweden, almost 30 percent more people died during the epidemic than is normal during this time of year, an increase similar to that of the United States and far higher than the small increases seen in its neighboring countries." Mrs. McC: As usual, Rand Paul doesn't know what he's talking about.
Andrew Desiderio of Politico: "... Donald Trump is appealing directly to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell in his push for Congress to more aggressively investigate the origins of the 2016 Russia investigation. Trump's plea to McConnell (R-Ky.) comes after Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) swiftly rejected Trump's calls for the panel to haul in former President Barack Obama for testimony about the FBI's handling of the investigation into former national security adviser Michael Flynn.... 'Mitch..., Time is running out. Get tough and move quickly, or it will be too late. The Dems are vicious, but got caught,' [wrote] Trump, who has asserted without evidence that Obama acted improperly. 'They MUST pay a big price for what they have done to our Country. Don't let them get away with this!' In a separate tweet, Trump wrote: 'The Republicans must play by the same rules, or die!'... In an interview Thursday on Fox News..., McConnell declined to endorse an effort to call Obama before the Senate, deferring to ... [Graham]." Mrs. McC: Here's where we anatomy students find out if a Turtle has a backbone.
Hannah Knowles of the Washington Post: "Two top Democrats have told the Trump administration to preserve all records related to the Friday removal of the State Department's inspector general, a late-night move that led House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) to warn of an acceleration in a 'dangerous pattern of retaliation' against federal watchdogs. Rep. Eliot L. Engel (D-N.Y.) and Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) launched an investigation Saturday into the ouster of Steve Linick, the latest in a string of weekend removals of oversight officials who have clashed with the Trump administration. Engel, the chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, claimed Linick was fired after opening an investigation into Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and said the timing suggested 'an unlawful act of retaliation.'" ~~~
~~~ Nahal Toosi of Politico: "... Donald Trump's decision to oust the State Department's inspector general may wind up backfiring on Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, whose role in the dust-up and overall use of his perch at Foggy Bottom now face heightened scrutiny from Democrats. Pompeo's wife, Susan, also could get dragged into any inquiries that arise.... The ex-congressman has repeatedly disavowed interest in [running for Kansas' open U.S. Senate seat], even as his actions have suggested he was laying the groundwork to leap into the contest, just in case. Whatever his ambitions, Pompeo's critics say too many of his actions as America's chief diplomat seem designed to bolster his domestic standing with the GOP base.... In letters to the White House, the State Department and Linick's office..., [Rep. Eliot Engel (D-N.Y.) & Senator Bob Menendez (D-N.J.] cited reports that Pompeo had recommended Trump fire Linick, saying, 'It is our understanding that he did so because the inspector general had opened an investigation into wrongdoing by Secretary Pompeo himself. Such an action, transparently designed to protect Secretary Pompeo from personal accountability, would undermine the foundation of our democratic institutions and may be an illegal act of retaliation.'... U.S. diplomats have quietly voiced concerns for many months about Susan Pompeo's role at the State Department. They note, for instance, that she occasionally travels with the secretary, requiring State Department staffers to assist her." ~~~
~~~ Conor Finnegan & Benjamin Siegel of ABC News: "Under Linick, the State Department Inspector General's office has repeatedly criticized the agency and its Trump leadership for poor performance. Last November, it found that senior Trump appointees improperly retaliated against a career civil servant over her perceived nationality and political beliefs. Last August, it said senior political appointees in charge of one bureaus treated employees in a 'harsh and aggressive manner' and created a 'negative and "vindictive" environment.'... Appointed to the role in 2013 by President Barack Obama, Linick is a career government lawyer who served as a senior Justice Department official under President George W. Bush and assistant U.S. attorney in California and Virginia under President Bill Clinton." ~~~
The firings of multiple Inspectors General is unprecedented; doing so without good cause chills the independence essential to their purpose. It is a threat to accountable democracy and a fissure in the constitutional balance of power. -- Sen. Mitt Romney, in a tweet Saturday ~~~
~~~ Philip Rucker, et al., of the Washington Post: "President Trump accelerated his retaliatory purge of public servants by firing the State Department's inspector general, who had played a minor role in the president's impeachment proceedings and was said to have begun investigating alleged misconduct by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. Acting on Pompeo's recommendation, Trump abruptly terminated Steve A. Linick late Friday night, again challenging established norms of American governance in his push to rid the federal bureaucracy of officials he considers insufficiently loyal to or protective of him and his administration.... Although [inspectors general] technically are political appointees, their independence has long been protected."
~~~ Zeeshan Aleem of Vox: "While Democrats appear to believe an inquiry into Pompeo may be behind this loss of confidence, it's also possible that Trump plans to release Linick due to his small role in 2019's impeachment proceedings. While he did not testify, Linick did hand over documents to Congress that had been given to the State Department by Rudy Giuliani, the president's personal lawyer. [Trump removed] a number of officials involved in those proceedings ...from their posts.... 'The assault on the [inspector generals] is late-stage corruption, and Trump's kicking down one of the last bulwarks that stand between us and the burgeoning corruption-driven authoritarianism,' tweeted Walter Shaub, the former White House ethics chief who resigned in 2017.... [He added] that Trump's moves are signs of a 'collapsing republic.'" ~~~
~~~ Kevin Drum of Mother Jones: "The Trump message continues to get stronger every day. If you so much as open an investigation against someone in the Trump administration, you're fired. Needless to say, this poses a problem. The job of an inspector general is to audit the cabinet department he works for. But since Trump is currently president, everyone in every cabinet department is part of the Trump administration. This basically means that the entire IG corps is on notice not to seriously investigate anyone." ~~~
~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: According to some legal expert I heard on CNN, the president* cannot fire an IG because he doesn't "have confidence" in the IG, as Trump wrote in a letter to Pelosi (see Vox's report & elsewhere), but only if the IG has proved guilty of some dereliction of duty, like, say, being drunk on the job or shtumping the Secretary's wife during office hours (oh, Steve, you didn't!). It's been my observation over the years that IGs often conduct investigations at the request of legislators from the opposing party. Needless to say, the subjects of these investigations are not likely to be ones that please the administration. The president or president* is not supposed to like it, even if he should want to know if some subordinates are behaving badly. As Drum lays out, investigating the department s/he works for is her or his job.
J. Edward Moreno of The Hill: "Nevada Democratic Rep. Steven Horsford admitted Friday that he was involved in an extra-marital affair with a former Senate intern...,.Gabriela Linder, who interned for former Sen. Harry Reid (D-Nev.) in 2009.... First elected in 2012 then again in 2018, Horsford is the first black person elected to represent Nevada in Congress. He has been married since 2000 and has three children. The affair reportedly happened from 2009-2010 and then again from 2017-2019." --s
Presidential Race
"Donald Trump Jr. Smears Biden with Baseless Instagram Post." Jonathan Martin of the New York Times: "President Trump's eldest son on Saturday posted a social media message suggesting Joseph R. Biden Jr. was a pedophile, an incendiary and baseless charge that illustrates the tactics the president is turning to as he attempts to erase Mr. Biden's early advantage in key state polls. Donald Trump Jr., who is one of his father's most prominent campaign surrogates, put on Instagram a picture of Mr. Biden saying: 'See you later, alligator' alongside an image of an alligator saying: 'In a while, pedophile.' When a reporter shared the Instagram post online, the younger Mr. Trump, echoing one of his father's tactics, wrote on Twitter that he was only 'joking around.'.... Yet in the same Twitter post, he also reprised his original insinuation. He accused the former vice president of 'unwanted touching' alongside a collage of photographs of Mr. Biden showing affection for children. The misleading images were mostly taken from public swearing-in ceremonies at the Capitol, where the former vice president warmly greeted lawmakers and their families." ~~~
~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: Good for Martin & the Times for getting a story right, and not making total trash talk a he-said/he-said story, as the Times is wont to do.
Marty Johnson of the Hill: "President Trump on Saturday lashed out at the Obama administration's early handling of the Russia investigation, mocked the news media and flatly dismissed his presumptive Democratic rival >Joe Biden in an hours-long tweetstorm. Trump, who is at Camp David for the weekend, spent much of the first half of Saturday sharing various articles and tweets aimed at buttressing his allegations against Obama-era officials and poking at ;various perceived critics." Mrs. McC: But, you know, all he cares about is you.
AP: "Michigan Rep. Justin Amash, a high-profile critic of ... Donald Trump who quit the GOP and became an independent, announced Saturday he would not seek the Libertarian nomination for the White House, weeks after saying he was running because voters wanted an 'alternative' to the two major parties. In deciding to drop out, he cited the challenges of trying to campaign as a third-party candidate during the coronavirus pandemic." The Washington Post's report, by Dave Weigel, is here. The New York Times' report, by Alexander Burns, is here.
Rich Shapiro of NBC: "Luke Denman, 34, was one of two ex-Green Berets [the other being fellow Army veteran Aidan Berry] arrested in a foiled plot to oust Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro. He's now locked up in a Venezuelan jail, his fate in the hands of a leader the U.S. government considers a dictator responsible for tens of millions of his people going hungry.... A third ex-Green Beret, Jordan Goudreau, claimed responsibility for the plot.... In interviews with NBC News, a half dozen family members and close friends of Denman and Berry said they believe the former Special Operations soldiers would have only participated in such an operation had the two men been convinced it was supported by the U.S. government.... Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has said the U.S. had no 'direct involvement' in the operation." --s
Jillian Ambrose of the Guardian: "Beer and soft drinks could soon be sipped from 'all-plant' bottles under new plans to turn sustainably grown crops into plastic in partnership with major beverage makers. A biochemicals company in the Netherlands hopes to kickstart investment in a pioneering project that hopes to make plastics from plant sugars rather than fossil fuels.... Globally around 300 million tonnes of plastic is made from fossil fuels every year, which is a major contributor to the climate crisis.... The bio-refinery plans ... could appear on supermarket shelves by 2023." --s
Beyond the Beltway
Puerto Rico. Danica Coto of the AP: "Gov. Wanda Vázquez announced on Saturday that she will hold a nonbinding referendum in November to decide whether Puerto Rico should become a U.S. state, a move that comes amid growing disillusion with the island's U.S. territorial status. For the first time in the island's history, the referendum will ask a single, simple question: Should Puerto Rico be immediately admitted as a U.S. state? It's an answer that requires approval from U.S. Congress and a question that outraged the island's small group of independence supporters and members of the main opposition Popular Democratic Party, which supports the status quo. But it's a gamble that members of the governor's pro-statehood party are confident will pay off given that Puerto Rico has struggled to obtain federal funds for hurricanes Irma and Maria, a string of recent strong earthquakes and the coronavirus pandemic amid growing complaints that the island does not receive fair and equal treatment."