Puerto Rico Open Your Eyes

Did you know that Puerto Rico once had its own constitution—completely unrelated to the United States?

3 min · 10 de ene de 2026
Portada del episodio Did you know that Puerto Rico once had its own constitution—completely unrelated to the United States?

Descripción

Did you know that Puerto Rico once had its own constitution—completely unrelated to the United States? Before the U.S. invasion in 1898, Puerto Rico was already a self-governing political entity. In 1897, the island was granted the 1897 Autonomic Constitution (Constitución Autonómica) by royal decree, establishing an elected Puerto Rican government, its own parliament, control over internal affairs, and recognition of Puerto Ricans as political citizens—not colonial subjects. This constitution was not temporary, experimental, or symbolic. It was legally binding and could only be altered with the consent of Puerto Rico itself. When the United States invaded in 1898, that constitution was ignored, suspended, and never restored—without a vote, without consent, and without international consultation. Puerto Rico did not begin as a U.S. possession. It lost a constitution before it was ever allowed to gain another.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Puerto Rico Open Your Eyes!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

63 episodios

episode Did you know that Puerto Rico once had its own constitution—completely unrelated to the United States? artwork

Did you know that Puerto Rico once had its own constitution—completely unrelated to the United States?

Did you know that Puerto Rico once had its own constitution—completely unrelated to the United States? Before the U.S. invasion in 1898, Puerto Rico was already a self-governing political entity. In 1897, the island was granted the 1897 Autonomic Constitution (Constitución Autonómica) by royal decree, establishing an elected Puerto Rican government, its own parliament, control over internal affairs, and recognition of Puerto Ricans as political citizens—not colonial subjects. This constitution was not temporary, experimental, or symbolic. It was legally binding and could only be altered with the consent of Puerto Rico itself. When the United States invaded in 1898, that constitution was ignored, suspended, and never restored—without a vote, without consent, and without international consultation. Puerto Rico did not begin as a U.S. possession. It lost a constitution before it was ever allowed to gain another.

10 de ene de 20263 min
episode “Puerto Rico: Desplazados Dos Veces, Sin Voz en Ningún Lugar” artwork

“Puerto Rico: Desplazados Dos Veces, Sin Voz en Ningún Lugar”

La mayoría de la gente sabe que Puerto Rico no puede votar por el presidente de Estados Unidos. Saben que no tenemos representación con voto en el Congreso ni en el Senado. Pero lo que muchos no entienden es que los puertorriqueños estamos doblemente privados de derechos. En la isla, no podemos votar por el presidente ni por el Congreso. No hay representación. No hay voz. Luego, muchos somos forzados a irnos— por la crisis económica, los huracanes, la austeridad y la inestabilidad— para sobrevivir y apoyar a nuestras familias desde Estados Unidos. ¿Y qué ocurre entonces? Perdemos el derecho a votar sobre el futuro de Puerto Rico. No se nos permite votar en los plebiscitos de estatus. Mientras tanto, otros hispanos que viven en Estados Unidos pueden votar en las elecciones de sus países de origen simplemente yendo a su embajada. Esa es la ironía. Esa es la injusticia. No estamos hablando de personas que nunca vivieron en Puerto Rico. Estamos hablando de puertorriqueños desplazados. Golpeados una vez en la isla. Golpeados otra vez en el exilio. Esto tiene que cambiar. Los puertorriqueños—vivan donde vivan— deben tener el derecho a votar por el estatus y el futuro de su país.

10 de ene de 20261 min