Puerto Rico Governor Ricardo Rosselló is facing calls for his resignation after a local media outlet published almost 900 pages from a leaked private group chat revealing homophobic, misogynistic, and other vile remarks written by him and his cronies.
The group chat happened on the messenger app Telegram last fall and included 11 male political figures within Rosselló’s inner circle, including Christian Sobrino, the government’s chief financial officer, and Luis Gerardo Rivera Marín, the State secretary and interim governor.
Among the homophobic remarks are jokes about people’s sexualities and repeated use of the word “c*cksucker,” as well as the terms “unprecedented c*cksucker” and “historic c*cksucker levels.”
In another message, Rosselló takes aim at Puerto Rican singer Ricky Martin, writing: “Nothing says patriarchal oppression like Ricky Martin. Ricky Martin is such a male chauvinist that he f*cks men because women don’t measure up. Pure patriarchy.”
Responding to a picture of a woman wearing a t-shirt that reads “Antipatriarchy, Feminist, Lesbian, Trans, Caribbean, Latin American,” Rosselló says, “That must be some type of record, isn’t it?”
Other messages include jokes about people’s weight, calling women “whores,” fantasizing about shooting political opponents, and celebrating an activist’s untimely death.
A roundup of the leaked texts can be found here.
Representative Jenniffer González-Colón, Puerto Rico’s nonvoting member in Congress, said Rosselló should forget about seeking re-election in 2020 and instead “immediately reflect on his role as governor.”
Meanwhile, Puerto Rico’s Senate president and House majority leader, who are both members of Rosselló’s party and who were both targeted in the group chat, said they no longer have faith in him as governor.
And Ricky Martin responded over the weekend by tweeting: “We CANNOT allow our Puerto Rico to be in the hands of such ‘leaders.’ … Do an act of true generosity, worth and love for Puerto Rico and give your position to another person with the wisdom and leadership to direct your destiny as a people.”
For his part, Rosselló, who affiliates himself with the Democratic party, says he has no plans of resigning and instead spent the weekend at church seeking forgiveness. He also says that he wrote the messages at a stressful time when he was working 18 hour days and they were his way of “venting.”
But this is just one of many controversies surrounding Rosselló at the moment. His administration is currently under investigation over how it spent government dollars following Hurricane Maria in 2017. Just last week, the FBI arrested two of his former top officials on fraud charges involving more than $15 million in federal funds.