The party began as the electoral wing of the
Puerto Rican independence movement. It is the largest of the independence parties, and the only one that is on the ballot during elections (other candidates must be added in by hand). In 1948, two years after being founded, the PIP gathered 10.2% of the votes in the island. In 1952, two years after an armed uprising of the
Puerto Rican Nationalist Party, it obtained 19% of the votes, its highest electoral support ever, which made it the second electoral party on the island for a moment. In 1956 it took 12.4% of the votes; in 1960 3.1%; in 1964, 4%; in 1968, 3.5%; in 1972, 5.4%; in 1976, 5.7%; in 1980, 5.4%; in 1984, 3.6%, and in 1988, 5.5%. In 2004 it obtained 2.7% of the votes, and in 2008 it took 2%.
Founding The party was founded on 27 October 1946, They felt the independence movement had been betrayed by the
Popular Democratic Party, whose ultimate goal had originally been independence.
FBI surveillance of the party Former FBI Director
Louis Freeh admitted 2003 in a congressional budget hearing that the
FBI had engaged in suppression of Puerto Rican independence groups from the 1930s to the 1990s, including surveillance of the Puerto Rican Independence Party. After Freeh's public admission,
The New York Times reported the following details about actions against the Puerto Rican Independence Party: The FBI's surveillance of persons and organizations advocating Puerto Rico's independence, was not only recognized by the FBI's top leadership, but was also detailed in 1.8 million documents, a fraction of which were released in 2000. The political repression of the party and the independence movement at large by the U.S. Federal Government between the years 1930 and 1975, coupled with an absorption of some cultural-nationalist ideology by the
populares in the years thereafter have been identified as major reasons for the electoral decline of the party leading to its loss of official status in 2008.
1970s In 1971, the PIP gubernatorial candidate,
Rubén Berríos led a protest against the
US Navy in
Culebra. During the 1972 elections, the PIP showed the largest growth in its history while running a
democratic socialist, pro-worker, pro-poor campaign. One year later, during a delegate assembly, Rubén Berríos declared that the party was not presenting a
Marxist–Leninist platform and took the matter to the PIP's assembly which voted in favor of the party's current stance in favor of
social democracy. The Marxist–Leninist faction, called the "terceristas", split into several groups. The biggest of them went into the
Popular Socialist Movement, while the rest went into the
Puerto Rican Socialist Party.
1990s In 1999, PIP leaders, especially
Rubén Berríos, became involved in the
Navy-Vieques protests started by many citizens of
Vieques against the presence of the
US military in the island-
municipality (
see also: Cause of Vieques).
2008 election During the 2008 elections, the PIP lost official recognition for the second time, obtaining 2.04% of the gubernatorial vote. Loss of recognition was official on 2 January 2009. The minimum vote percentage to keep official recognition is 3.0% as per the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico law. The party also lost both of its seats in the
legislature, where they had had one seat in each house. In May 2009, the party submitted more than 100,000 signed petitions to the Puerto Rico's elections commission and regained legal status.
2012 election During the 2012 elections, the PIP lost official recognition for the third time, obtaining 2.5% of the gubernatorial vote. Loss of recognition became official on 2 January 2013. The minimum vote percentage to keep official recognition is 3.0% as per the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico law.
2016 election For the 2016 election,
Senator María de Lourdes Santiago was the party's nominee. She obtained 33,452 votes and came in fifth place, with 2.1% of the vote. Some of the senator's main policies for the election are outlined below. • Increase the basic teacher's salary to $3,000 per month. • Universal healthcare through the National Health Plan. • Merge the
House of Representatives and the
Senate into one
unicameral chamber, whereby the members are elected by
proportional representation. • Change the status of
Puerto Rico to that of a
Freely Associated State.
2020 election For the 2020 election,
Juan Dalmau was the party's nominee. He obtained 175,402 votes and came in fourth place, with a historic 13.58% of the vote, the second-best electoral performance in PIP history. With the
Movimiento Victoria Ciudadana (Citizens' Victory Movement) obtaining 179,265 votes and coming in third place with 13.95% of the vote, this has been the largest share of the Puerto Rican vote (27.53%) ever gained by
left-wing parties in Puerto Rico.
2024 election Juan Dalmau is on the list of candidates for the
general elections of November 5, 2024. PIP formed an alliance with
Movimiento Victoria Ciudadana called
Alianza de País. The Puerto Rican Independence Party also filed a petition before the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico against the holding of the
non-binding referendum on the status of Puerto Rico. The Supreme Court of Puerto Rico accepted this petition on July 16. The Supreme Court's resolution, gives a "non-extendable deadline" of 15 days to the requesting party to present its argument. After this deadline, the defendant will have 15 days to present its arguments. On August 22, 2024, the Puerto Rico Supreme Court dismissed the petition, allowing for the referendum to proceed on November 5, 2024. ==International support==