Should Puerto Rico Become the 51st State? Follow the Vote As It Comes In.

Voters tell Congress what they want for their future.

Ricardo Arduengo/Zuma

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Puerto Ricans head to the polls Sunday for a plebiscite intended to chart a course for the island’s future. At issue is whether voters favor beginning the process of asking the US Congress to allow Puerto Rico to become an actual state; if voters want to ask for greater independence; or if voters want to carry on with the current colonial relationship that exists today.

To many, the political status of Puerto Rico is at the heart of the territory’s ongoing debt crisis; it’s facing more than $120 billion in outstanding debt and pension obligations. Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo RossellĆ³ was elected last fall on a pro-statehood platform, saying in his inaugural address in January that “there is no way to overcome Puerto Ricoā€™s crisis given its colonial condition.”

Many on the island plan to boycott the election, arguing that since Puerto Rico cannot compel Congress to comply with voters’ wishes, it’s meaningless. ā€œThey are spending $8 millionw holding this vote, and yet will the US Congress take any notice of it? No, they wonā€™t,” Juan Collazo, 22, told the Guardian. “This is just another attempt to divide and conquer us.ā€

The polls close at 3 p.m. EDT. Follow the election results here, courtesy of the Decision Desk HQ

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