Puerto Rico's new governor sworn in days after a major blackout left 
		much of the island in the dark
		
		 
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		 [January 03, 2025]  
		By DÁNICA COTO 
		
		SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — Jenniffer González Colón was sworn in 
		Thursday as Puerto Rico’s new governor during a normally ebullient 
		ceremony held amid widespread anger over a blackout that hit the U.S. 
		territory days ago. 
		 
		González, a Republican who backs President-elect Donald Trump and whose 
		pro-statehood New Progressive Party secured a historic third consecutive 
		term after she won the Nov. 5 election, has pledged to stabilize the 
		Caribbean island’s crumbling power grid. 
		 
		“There are many challenges facing our island,” she said in her first 
		public address as governor as she acknowledged the blackout in a speech 
		to a crowd gathered in front of the seaside Capitol. “That is precisely 
		what moves me to address that first challenge with a sense of urgency.” 
		 
		She pledged to improve Puerto Rico's infrastructure, hospitals and 
		schools, adding that she intends to boost bilingual education. 
		 
		“I'm going to fulfill my promises to you,” she said. “I am not going to 
		govern only for those who voted for me. I am going to be the governor of 
		all Puerto Ricans.” 
		 
		Before the start of a ceremony to celebrate her swearing in, González 
		attended Mass surrounded by family and supporters. 
		
		
		  
		
		“What better than to come first to thank God and to ask God to give me 
		the wisdom, the fortitude and the tools to fulfill everything I promised 
		the people of Puerto Rico,” she told reporters. 
		 
		A protester with her face covered interrupted the Mass at Parroquia 
		Santa Teresita in San Juan. She yelled, “Jenniffer, we came for you! 
		Puerto is without power.” 
		 
		Meanwhile, a small group of protesters gathered at the Capitol before 
		González’s arrival. They were especially rankled that a well-known, 
		outspoken activist elected to Puerto Rico's Senate for the first time 
		was not allowed inside the Capitol, with the elections commission noting 
		he had not yet been officially certified. 
		 
		Protesting the ceremony was Yara Humarán Martínez, an aquatic physical 
		therapist whose 83-year-old mother remains without power. 
		 
		“I don’t have any hope that she will change anything,” she said of the 
		new governor. 
		 
		González has promised to appoint an energy “czar” to review potential 
		contractual breaches while another operator is found to possibly replace 
		Luma Energy, a private company that oversees the transmission and 
		distribution of power in Puerto Rico. 
		 
		However, no contract can be canceled without prior approval from Puerto 
		Rico’s Energy Bureau and a federal control board that oversees the 
		island’s finances. 
		 
		Outages were still being reported on Thursday as crews tried to 
		stabilize the grid following the blackout that hit early Tuesday, 
		leaving 1.3 million customers in the dark as Puerto Ricans prepared for 
		New Year’s Eve. 
		 
		While electricity had been restored to 99% of the utility's 1.47 million 
		total customers, more than 600,000 were temporarily left without power 
		on New Year’s Day when part of the system collapsed again, according to 
		Luma. 
		 
		“The stability of the system is fragile,” Luma said late Wednesday as it 
		warned of more outages on Thursday given an ongoing lack of generation. 
		“We know and understand how frustrating it is for our clients to be 
		without service for long periods of time.” 
		 
		Backup generators were put in place to ensure a smooth swearing-in 
		ceremony on Thursday given that renowned musicians were scheduled to 
		perform. 
		 
		The anticipated revelry was characteristic of González, a 48-year-old 
		attorney and recent mother of twins who prior to the election showed up 
		at her party’s assembly wearing a Wonder Woman tiara and cuffs. She also 
		made the news after peeling out of one of her party’s conventions in an 
		off-road vehicle earlier this year. 
		
		
		  
		
		Supporters and critics gathered for the ceremony, some clutching 
		umbrellas to shield themselves from the blistering sun. 
		 
		“Because she’s a woman, she’s going to be a great governor,” said Amanda 
		Sánchez León, a retired government employee, who arrived two hours early 
		to secure a spot outside an area reserved for guests. She said she was 
		hopeful that González would reduce violent crimes and improve education 
		and health, “especially for us older people.” She also believed the 
		power crisis would improve and that González would see her promises 
		through. 
		 
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            Jenniffer Gonzalez Colon waves alongside her husband Jose Yovin 
			Vargas during her swearing-in ceremony as governor outside the 
			Capitol in San Juan, Puerto Rico, Thursday, Jan. 2, 2025. (AP 
			Photo/Alejandro Granadillo) 
            
			
			
			  
            “The people are suffering,” Sánchez said. 
			 
			Also supporting the new governor was Lizbeth Rodríguez, a school 
			nurse, who believed that as a mother, González would prioritize the 
			island’s weak education system and tackle crime. 
			 
			But Rodríguez remains rankled at what she believes is the 
			misspending of government money. 
			 
			“That’s what bothers the people. You’re doing fine, sure, but look 
			at us,” she said. 
			 
			González, of the pro-statehood New Progressive Party, had beat 
			former Gov. Pedro Pierluisi during their party’s primary in June. 
			 
			At the time, she was Puerto Rico’s representative in Congress and 
			had run on Pierluisi’s ticket four years ago. 
			 
			After beating him, she won the Nov. 5 general election with more 
			than 526,000 votes, or 41%. Trailing her was Juan Dalmau, who 
			represented Puerto Rico’s Independence Party and the Citizen Victory 
			Movement. 
			 
			It was the first time that the Popular Democratic Party, which 
			supports the island’s territorial status quo and is one of Puerto 
			Rico’s two main parties, came in third in a gubernatorial race. 
			 
			While González’s immediate challenge is Puerto Rico’s fragile power 
			grid, she also inherits a feeble economy that has slowly been 
			strengthening since the U.S. territory’s government declared in 2015 
			that it was unable to pay its more than $70 billion public debt 
			load. 
			 
			In 2017, it filed for the biggest U.S. municipal bankruptcy in 
			history. 
			 
			All but one government agency has since restructured its debt, with 
			Puerto Rico’s Electric Power Authority still struggling to do so. It 
			holds more than $9 billion in debt, the largest of any government 
			agency. 
			 
			Experts warn the island will keep struggling to attract investors 
			until the debt is restructured and the power grid strengthened. 
			 
			González also will have to work alongside a federal control board 
			that U.S. Congress created in 2016 to oversee Puerto Rico’s finances 
			and supervise the ongoing reconstruction after Hurricane María 
			slammed into the island in September 2017 as a powerful Category 4 
			storm, razing the electrical grid. 
            
			  
			She also faces pressure to create affordable housing, lower power 
			bills and the general cost of living, reduce violent crime, boost 
			Puerto Rico’s economy, with the island locked out of capital markets 
			since 2015, and improve a limping health care system as thousands of 
			doctors flock to the U.S. mainland. 
			 
			Like other governors of the pro-statehood party, González has said 
			she would push for Puerto Rico to become the 51st state, but such a 
			change would require approval from U.S. Congress and the U.S. 
			president. 
			 
			A nonbinding referendum held during the Nov. 5 election, the seventh 
			of its kind, asked voters to choose one of three options: statehood, 
			independence and independence with free association, under which 
			issues like foreign affairs, U.S. citizenship and use of the U.S. 
			dollar would be negotiated. 
			 
			With 63% of voters participating, statehood earned more than 615,000 
			votes, or 59%, with independence coming in second for the first time 
			with more than 309,000 votes, or 29%. Independence with free 
			association garnered more than 128,000 votes, or 12%. 
			 
			While Puerto Ricans are U.S. citizens, they are not allowed to vote 
			in presidential elections, and officials with the New Progressive 
			Party have noted the island receives unequal treatment when it comes 
			to Medicaid, Medicare and other federal programs. 
			 
			“Statehood means equality, and I want us to have that access to 
			opportunities,” González said. “I want to have those opportunities 
			here so that our people can move forward.” 
			
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