Puerto Rico’s embattled governor Ricardo Roselló has announced he will step down on Aug. 2 after a series of homophobic and sexist texts were leaked.
It follows nearly two weeks of massive demonstrations outside the governor’s mansion by angry and frustrated citizens who saw him and his administration as corrupt and unable to govern effectively.
The last straw was the release of hundreds of leaked group text messages between the governor and nine other members of his administration containing crude and offensive jokes, as well as a number of sexist and homophobic statements about women, political opponents, journalists, and even openly gay singer Ricky Martin.
The leaked chat messages, 889 pages of which were published by Puerto Rico’s Center for Investigative Journalism, shattered Roselló’s image as a clean-cut, upstanding family man, irreparably damaging his reputation, which had already been battered by his ineffectual response to several crises facing the island since taking office in 2017.
Under Roselló’s watch, Puerto Rico’s government has struggled with bankruptcy, and, just prior to his taking office, had been forced to cede a significant amount of its power to a financial oversight board, known colloquially as “La Junta,” tasked with resolving the territory’s debt crisis.
Just months later, Puerto Rico was hit by Hurricane Maria, which left Puerto Ricans without power for months and saw thousands of people perish either during or in the aftermath of the storm. Many blamed Roselló — in addition to the federal government — for the inadequate response to, and lack of preparations ahead of, the hurricane.
Then, just before the text messages were released, the FBI arrested Roselló’s former secretary of education and five others for allegedly steering federal money to unqualified, but politically connected, contractors.
In a video message posted to Facebook on Wednesday evening, Roselló announced his intention to step down, just days after saying he’d stay in office until the end of his term but would not run for re-election in 2020.
In the speech, Roselló defended the decisions he made while in office, whil also saying he did not wish to imperil the progress that had been made by staying in office — a nod to the fact that Puerto Rico’s Congress had already begun planning for impeachment hearings against him.
“My only priority has been the transformation of our island and the well-being of our people,” he said. “The demands have been overwhelming and I’ve received them with highest degree of humility.”
Rosselló’s post will be filled for the remainder of his term by Wanda Vázquez, his secretary of justice, due to the fact that the person next in the line of succession — former secretary of state Luis Rivera Marín — had previously resigned after it was revealed he was among the officials who took part in the group text chat, reports the Miami Herald.
The LGBTQ advocacy group GLAAD congratulated the activists — and several Puerto Rican artists and celebrities who had encouraged them — who demonstrated and demanded the governor’s resignation in a tweet.
“Congratulations to the people of Puerto Rico and activists and artists like @PedroJulio, @ricky_martin, @wcruz73 and Bad Bunny who led a peaceful and successful protest against Rosselló’s misogyny and homophobia.”
Congratulations to the people of Puerto Rico and activists and artists like @PedroJulio, @ricky_martin, @wcruz73 and Bad Bunny who led a peaceful and successful protest against Rosselló's misogyny and homophobia.https://t.co/996EDqftym
Sometimes, a book or movie or play speaks so directly to the zeitgeist, it's as if the artists are responding in real-time to a conversation we're all having. That's the case with John Leguizamo's The Other Americans, currently in its world-premiere run at Arena Stage. In the aftermath of the presidential election, amid feverish appraisals of Latino voters' support for Trump, this modern-day tragedy about a Queens Latino family fraying at the edges arrives at a moment of perfect relevance.
Offering insight into the struggles of son-of-an-immigrant laundromat owner Nelson Castro -- portrayed by Leguizamo, whose own family immigrated to the U.S. from Colombia when he was three -- the play also tackles everything from mental health to housing discrimination.
After decades of remaining silent, Al Pacino has finally admitted that the 1980 film Cruising, in which he starred, was "exploitative" of the gay community.
The 84-year-old actor makes the revelation in his memoir, Sonny Boy, noting that he was so uncomfortable with how director William Friedkin's film portrayed gay people that he never used the money he earned from the film for his personal gain.
"I never accepted the paycheck for Cruising," Pacino writes. "I took the money and it was a lot, and I put it in an irrevocable trust fund, meaning once I gave it, there was no taking it back. I don't know if it eased my conscience, but at least the money did some good."
Forest Hills is alive with the sounds of salsa, disco, and '70s soul inside the Castro household, ground zero for the devastating domestic events of John Leguizamo's new drama The Other Americans.
One of seven world premieres marking Arena Stage's 2024-25 season, The Other Americans arrives in a powerhouse production directed by award-winning actor-director Ruben Santiago-Hudson, and led by Leguizamo as proudly Colombian-American laundromat owner and family man Nelson Castro.
Nelson holds court in his expansive home in affluent, mostly white Forest Hills, Queens, having moved his family from what he calls "ghetto-ass" Jackson Heights. A scrappy business owner with a small empire of 'mats all over the borough, he might say he's living the American dream, but we're here to witness him waking up to very harsh reality.
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