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Demonstrators Shut Down Traffic in San Juan

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Tens of thousands of Puerto Ricans filled miles of a major highway in San Juan on Monday, marching in what is appears to be one of the largest protests the island has ever seen against Gov. Ricardo A. Rosselló, who has resisted persistent calls for his resignation.

The highway, Expreso Las Américas, teemed with people who carried Puerto Rican flags, waved protest signs and chanted to demand the removal of Rosselló, who said Sunday that he would not seek reelection in 2020 but would stay in office through his current term — and face possible impeachment.

Monday’s protest is part of an islandwide strike intended to paralyze Puerto Rico beyond San Juan. Organizers hope to draw 1 million people — about one-third of the island’s population — to the highway. That would eclipse the vast crowd that marched from the Capitol to the governor’s mansion, La Fortaleza, on Wednesday, culminating in clashes with police. Some of the protesters on Monday said they will again head to La Fortaleza.

A series of scandalous text messages touched off the demonstrations.

Protests against Rosselló began more than a week ago, after the publication of 889 pages of a leaked group chat between the governor and his closest aides. Besides being offensive, the messages revealed a cozy relationship between the governor and former staff members who now represent special interests.

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The crude messages were the final straw for Puerto Ricans who have suffered for years because of economic austerity measures and the devastation of Hurricane Maria.

The capital’s biggest mall won’t open and cruise ships are being turned away.

Rosselló’s defiance and decision to remain in office has only fueled protesters to stay in the streets longer. Late Sunday, demonstrators trapped a group of mayors and lawmakers who had met with the governor, blocking them from leaving until police intervened. The spontaneous protest took place in the upscale municipality of Guaynabo, a place typically supportive of the governor, signaling that he has few places on the island left on his side.

Before Monday’s march, the biggest shopping mall in San Juan, Plaza Las Américas, announced that it would not open for the day. Some banks also were closed and university classes were canceled.

And cruise ships will again be diverted from calling at the port Monday, keeping thousands of tourists away from small businesses in Old San Juan that depend on them.

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On Monday morning, El Nuevo Día, Puerto Rico’s largest newspaper, published a rare front-page editorial. “Governor, it’s time to listen to the people,” read the above-the-fold headline. “You must resign.”

Music stars, truckers and students — the protests are drawing people from all walks of life.

Attending the march Monday were Puerto Ricans not only from municipalities across the island but also from the vast Puerto Rican diaspora, returning to the island to join the protests.

There were retirees, college students, waiters, electricians, truckers — groups that sometimes protest separately but rarely, if ever, together. Some marchers shared sandwiches to keep their energy up under the blazing sun. The heat index was forecast to exceed 100 degrees. At one point, rain showers brought some relief.

Ruth Vélez, a 62-year-old retiree at the march, said Hurricane Maria destroyed her house in the municipality of Bayamón and the government’s reconstruction program turned her down for help.

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“I lived in that house for 30 years,” she said. “Now I’m on the street.”

Outside of Hiram Bithorn Stadium, the main gathering point for the protest in the San Juan neighborhood of Hato Rey, demonstrators arrived to music and kiosks selling anti-Rosselló memorabilia. Artists Bad Bunny, Ricky Martin, Ednita Nazario, Residente and Olga Tañón joined the crowd, traveling atop a truck.

Near the front of the march, protesters held a white banner with black letters that spelled out a message for the governor, “#RickyRenuncia” and “#NiCorruptosNiCobardes” — Neither the corrupt nor the cowardly.

Marchers yelled, “Ricky, ¡renuncia, el pueblo te repudia!” — Ricky, resign, the people reject you.

Mismanagement, a recession and a botched response to Hurricane Maria are at the heart of the crisis.

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The protests amount to a rejection of decades of mismanagement by leaders who always seemed to benefit while ordinary Puerto Ricans suffered. Grievances have been building up over 12 years of economic recession, a debt crisis that has prompted layoffs and cutbacks in public services and the botched response to Hurricane Maria.

The chat messages and the arrests this month of six people with ties to the Rosselló government were too much for many Puerto Ricans, who said they could no longer tolerate mocking, profanity and corruption, real or perceived, by leaders who were supposed to be fighting on their behalf in Washington and San Juan.

What do the protesters want?

They want to be rid of both Rosselló and another target of their ire, the unelected oversight board created by Congress to manage the finances of the island’s government, which owes far more than it can pay to its creditors. Thousands of government workers have been laid off, services have been cut, tuition raised and schools closed as Puerto Rico has struggled to resolve the debt crisis; none of that has been popular.

Rosselló has tried at times to push back against “la junta,” as the board is known. But many Puerto Ricans lump the two together in their frustration and fury. The protesters have taken to chanting “Ricky, renuncia, y llévate a la junta” — Ricky, resign, and take the board with you.

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The governor has said he will serve out his term.

Rosselló, whose term runs through 2020, said Sunday that he would not seek reelection, but also that he did not intend to resign. But some politicians have spoken of impeaching him and legislative leaders have asked a panel of jurists to issue a recommendation on whether to pursue impeachment charges.

One complication is that Puerto Rico has no lieutenant governor to take his place. The island’s secretary of state is supposed to step in as acting governor when needed, but that post is currently vacant — and the power to fill it belongs to Rosselló, though his nominee would have to be approved by the island’s Legislature. Leaders of the governing New Progressive Party are scrambling to find a candidate.

If there is no secretary of state, the governorship would go next to the secretary of justice, Wanda Vázquez Garced, but powerful legislative leaders from her party do not seem interested in having that happen.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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