January 17, 2026

U.S. Lawmakers Join Protest Call for Puerto Rico’s Governor to Resign

072119-08-Puerto-Rico-Ricardo-Rossello
U.S. Lawmakers Join Protest Call for Puerto Rico's Governor to Resign

U.S. Lawmakers Join Protest Call for Puerto Rico's Governor to Resign
Union workers join with other protesters as they demonstrate against Ricardo Rossello, the Governor of Puerto Rico on July 19, 2019 in Old San Juan, Puerto Rico. There have been calls for the Governor to step down after it was revealed that he and top aides were part of a private chat group that contained misogynistic and homophobic messages. / Joe Raedle, Getty Images

Thousands on the Caribbean island staged a seventh day of protests to seek his resignation.


Reuters

Several U.S. Democratic presidential candidates and lawmakers on Friday demanded Puerto Ricoโ€™s governor step down over offensive chat messages, as thousands on the Caribbean island staged a seventh day of protests to seek his resignation.

Banging pots and pans and chanting โ€œRicky Resign!,โ€ Puerto Ricans streamed into San Juanโ€™s old city on Friday night and called on Ricardo Rossello to quit over the misogynistic and homophobic messages.

The chats, from a Telegram message group and referring mainly to politicians and officials, were published on Saturday.

The leak, running to 889 pages, added to Rosselloโ€™s woes after two former officials were arrested by the FBI last week as part of a federal corruption probe in the U.S. territory.

The protests have also tapped into simmering resentment over Rosselloโ€™s handling of devastating hurricanes in 2017 and alleged corruption as Puerto Ricoโ€™s fragile economy struggles to recover from the islandโ€™s bankruptcy.

U.S. Representative Tulsi Gabbard joined the protests in San Juan, saying she wanted to โ€œstand up to corruption,โ€ as other Democratic presidential candidates including Julian Castro and Elizabeth Warren also called for Rossello to quit.

โ€œWe must stand with la isla. Rossello must resign,โ€ tweeted U.S. Representative Alexandria Ocasio Cortez, whose mother was born in Puerto Rico.

The islandโ€™s nonvoting representative in the U.S. Congress, Jenniffer Gonzalez, earlier called for his resignation, while Rosselloโ€™s press secretary Dennise Perez resigned, saying she could no longer hold the position after she was called corrupt in front of her son.

โ€œItโ€™s your turn, Ricky,โ€ protesters chanted on the street after word spread that Perez had stepped aside. Rossello, who is affiliated with the U.S. Democratic Party, has refused to step down but said he would hold an emergency meeting with leaders of Puerto Ricoโ€™s New Progressive Party, which he leads.

Puerto Rico House Speaker Carlos Mendez on Friday announced the creation of an independent committee to determine whether the center-right politician engaged in illegal activity in the chats. The group has ten days to deliver its findings.

The islandโ€™s bar association published a report citing clear grounds to impeach the 40-year-old former scientist, based on the โ€œdepravityโ€ of his messages.

The chats, revealed by Puerto Ricoโ€™s Center for Investigative Journalism, showed how Rossello and allies exchanged vulgar memes and comments as well as privileged information.

While opposition legislators back impeachment, the process has yet to gain critical support from lawmakers in Rosselloโ€™s ruling party. But politicians like Gonzalez are increasingly concerned about Puerto Ricoโ€™s โ€œanarchicโ€ image after clashes in San Juan this week and allegations the two administration officials arrested by the FBI stole government funds.

The violence and political turmoil comes at a critical stage in the U.S. territoryโ€™s bankruptcy process. It has also raised concerns with U.S. lawmakers who are weighing the islandโ€™s requests for billions of federal dollars for healthcare and hurricane recovery efforts.

โ€œThe island cannot afford to lose already approved federal resources, nor the ones we are working to obtain,โ€ Gonzalez said in her letter to Rossello urging him to step aside.


Originally published by Reuters, 07.20.2019.