If they believe that, why did all but 16 vote against it when it was proposed in congress a few weeks ago?
The bill, unlikely to pass the Senate this year, was opposed by Republicans on the grounds that it could lead to statehood for the territory.
www.businessinsider.com
Because the process proposed is not reflective of what essentially half of Puerto Rico favors.
Only about 2% of Puerto Ricans favor independence. Almost as many favor the current status as favor statehood (the difference changes with every survey) and the process must offer the three clear alternatives of Independencia, Estado Libre Asociado and Estadidad. That array was not offered by the proposal. The wording did not establish the current "Free Associated State" as the "commonwealth" option in the proposal (it modified "commonwealth" to something it isn't). It offered, instead, two forms of independence as well as statehood.
The pro-Statehood El Nuevo Día newspaper opposed it vehemently because it distorted the definition of what "Commonwealth" is now and what it would mean in the referendum.
The objection was due to the wording that the bill, which passed 233-191 with some Republican support, "would offer voters in the U.S. territory three options: statehood, independence or independence with free association." The change in "free association" which is the current status into "independence with free association" would remove all the US involvement in the government, economy and society in Puerto Rico. As such, the proposed legislation did not offer in any way to vote for the preservation of the current status, which nearly half of all Puerto Ricans on the Island support and embrace.
It's important to note that the favorite sport in Puerto Rico is politics due to the "status" question. At election time, flags for the red, blue or green party identification fly over nearly every home at every economic level... including mine for several decades.
The New Progressive Party, itself, supported the bill as it closed the door to the heavily supported "Commonwealth" and only gave the choice of statehood or some form of total or partial independence as a new country; that would guarantee statehood would win as the "independentistas" only amount to a few percent of the electorate.
Of course, since nearly half of all Puerto Ricans favor the existing Commonwealth status, there would be huge opposition on the Island to the Democrat sponsored bill because it does/did not offer maintenance of the widely accepted current "Commonweath" which is a bad translation of "Free Associated State".