Political Hotsheet
By

Rebecca Kaplan /

CBS News/ March 15, 2012, 1:03 PM

Santorum doubles down on English in Puerto Rico idea

Santorum seeks to keep momentum AP Photo/Dennis M. Rivera Pichardo

(CBS News) SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico - Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum on Thursday doubled down on his statement that Puerto Ricans need to speak English before their island territory can become a state. He said that English needs to be "spoken universally" and should be a condition of statehood.

Santorum came here to court Republican voters in advance of the GOP primary on Sunday. But the trip may not be having the desired effect. Puerto Rico's nonvoting representative in Congress, Democrat Pedro Pierluisi, said on Thursday on CNN that Santorum's comments were "narrow and limiting" and his English-language condition was "unreasonable."

A delegate listed on Sunday's ballot, meanwhile, asked Puerto Rican election authorities to remove his name from the list of those committed to Santorum. Oreste Ramos, a former member of Puerto Rico's Senate, said that Santorum's requirement is unconstitutional and "would crash into our sociological and linguistic reality." Beyond that, he said in a letter to election officials reported by The Spokesman newspaper, Santorum's position is "offensive."

English is one of two official languages in Puerto Rico and is the language of the federal government on the island. However, the Census Bureau reported that in 2000, nearly 86 percent of Puerto Ricans spoke a language other than English at home and that nearly 72 percent spoke English "less than very well."

"This needs to be a bilingual country, not just a Spanish-speaking country. And, right now, it is overwhelmingly just Spanish-speaking," Santorum told reporters in San Juan on Thursday. "In order to fully integrate into American society, English has to be a language that is spoken here also and spoken universally."

Later on Thursday, talking with reporters, Santorum said he never suggested that English be the "only language" of Puerto Rico and that his original comments were distorted, although he did not specify who he thought distorted them.

"We understand that people of different cultures speak different languages, but we have a common language, and that's what I was saying yesterday," Santorum said. "To suggest that -- maliciously, I would add -- someone would maliciously write that I said that was really unfortunate.... We've worked with the people of Puerto Rico, governors of the past. We've done things to try to help benefit Puerto Rico. For someone to misrepresent and completely fabricate something that I never said or even intimated is very disappointing."

Puerto Ricans are set to vote on statehood in November. Asked if the lack of an English mandate would be a deal-breaker for statehood, Santorum replied, "I think that would be a condition.... That's how you integrate fully into American life. It's the best opportunity for you to be economically successful, is to speak English."

Referring to Puerto Rican students, he said, "We're not doing them any favors" by failing to teach them English. "The public schools in most areas don't teach English and provide bilingual education, and I think that is an issue that has to be resolved for Puerto Rico to move forward into full status," Santorum said.

As for the Ramos's departure, Santorum brushed it off by bragging to reporters about his replacement on the delegate slate: baseball player Carlos Baerga.

"I'm a big baseball fan so I met Carlos yesterday, and he offered to be a delegate," Santorum told reporters after participating in a parade around Old San Juan. "That was awesome for me."

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
8 Comments Add a Comment
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RobAla says:
When is the last time you saw a positive article about Republicans from CBS? This is just more of the same.
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NewPolemic replies:
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As soon as Republicans do something positive I am sure CBS will report on it. Don't hold your breath.
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stevex47 says:
He can't be this dumb, really.

He must be just catering to the birther extremists who eat this stuff up, just like the limbaw spewage.
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norcalruss says:
Rick Saint-Moron is a tin-eared, knucklehead who just wasted time and money going to PR. Apparently he is too dumb to know that they have had at least two plebiscites where the citizens were given three choices for PR's future:

A. Become a Republic
B. To petition Congress to become the 51st state of the USA
C. To remain as a commonwealth of the USA

In both cases a plurality voted for PR to remain as it is. So what Saint-Moron is doing is to appeal to less than one third of the voters who want statehood, but then telling them they have to give up their language for English first. The man is an idiot, he will crash and burn in PR because of this as well as to remind Hispanics why they shouldn't be voting for the GOP.
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ShadowJakk replies:
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Actually, in 1998, the Statehooders almost won. it was 46.6 to 50.5.
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JSwisshelm says:
Rick Santorum is just plain rude and ignorant. His first allegiance is to the Catholic church and the Vatican, not to the United States. He just wants to be President so he can turn this country into a theocracy. I think he is creepy and, quite honestly, he scares me.
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soap-suds says:
I wonder if Santorum promoted "Official English" in Hawaii before Romney whipped him?
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Raptorsmasher says:
What and idiot. There is no requirement that any state must make English the official language to be accepted into the Union. Santorum is just pandering to his ignorant base.
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