Spectators enjoy Boston’s Puerto Rican Festival and Parade this past July.Vanessa Calderón-Rosado, CEO of Inquilinos Boricuas en Acción in Boston, couldn’t believe what she was hearing when a friend texted her a clip from a Donald Trump rally.
“I was thinking, ‘Wait, is this real? Is this not, you know, like a made-up thing?’” she said.
At a Madison Square Garden rally in New York on Sunday, stand-up comic Tony Hinchcliffe said to the crowd, “I don’t know if you guys know this, but there’s literally a floating island of garbage in the middle of the ocean right now. I think it’s called Puerto Rico.”
It hit a sore spot for some of the 3.2 million Puerto Ricans on the island who are not eligible to vote in presidential elections, despite paying into the country’s tax system. But Puerto Ricans on the mainland, part of what many call the “diaspora,” are even more numerous — 5.8 million, according to U.S. census data. And they can vote.
Calderón-Rosado found it deeply offensive as she reflected back on how Congress and the federal government had responded to Hurricanes Irma and Maria under Trump’s first term.
“After the destruction, he resisted sending that aid to the island, and as a result, recovery of that island took so much longer than it needed — and many people died because of that,” she said.
Thousands of people died in Puerto Rico during and after Hurricane Maria.
Massachusetts is home to over 320,000 Puerto Ricans, a number that grew significantly after the storm’s devastation. The poor response from the U.S. federal government to the dilapidated electrical grid, and
subsequently, education and health care systems, drove families to
communities in the mainland to restart their lives.
Lorna
Rivera, director of the Gastón Institute for Latino Community
Development & Public Policy at UMass Boston, pointed to the
contributions of local Puerto Ricans, especially those who have become
veterans, elected officials and nonprofit leaders.
“This
is really not just a problem with this particular comedian’s racism,
but it represents the broader like treatment of Latinos as ‘others.’ You
know, even if we’re U.S. citizens, we’re still foreign,” Rivera said.
Mark
Martinez is a local Puerto Rican born in Massachusetts and said Puerto
Ricans appreciate a good joke. But Hinchcliffe’s comments, he said,
aren’t funny.
“To have
someone running for president put someone on their stage to talk about a
place that means so much to all of us,” Martinez said. “It just feels
really dismissive and really degrading and like another punch to the
gut.”
To him, Puerto Ricans who live on the island are still overwhelmingly overlooked.
“I am skeptical of anyone running for president that says they’re going to do good things for Puerto Rico,” said Martinez.
He
sees the response to Hurricane Maria under Trump as a clear failed
test. Martinez is more confident in a Kamala Harris presidency to
address the island’s issues.
Puerto
Ricans on the island have been citizens of the United States since
1917. Waves of migration have occurred following World War II, the
dissolution of pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities and during
ongoing natural disasters.
State Sen. Adam Gomez represents the Hampden
District, which includes Springfield, a Puerto Rican enclave. He’s the
first Puerto Rican elected to the state Senate.
He
thinks the garbage comment ignores the struggles of Puerto Ricans
surviving there and on the mainland. Exercising the right to vote, and
for the “right person,” he said, will be important this election.
“We’re
in this moment in time when we need to continue talking to fellow
Puerto Ricans in these battleground states to make sure that they know
that remarks like this will not be tolerated,” he said.
Calderón-Rosado of Inquilinos Boricuas en Acción thinks the “joke” will have a resounding effect next Tuesday.
“This
has had a really strong effect and impact in the diaspora,” she said.
“And I think people will remember when they go out to vote on November
5th.”
This story was published by GBH on Oct. 29, 2024.