Posted on Saturday, 05.17.14
Charlie, this flip-flop's a bad idea
BY CARL HIAASEN
CHIAASEN@MIAMIHERALD.COM
Charlie Crist wants to go to Cuba this summer, in the middle of his
campaign to get elected governor of Florida again.
It would be a flaky thing to do, but that's Charlie. He thinks the trip
will win him votes.
His sunny optimism is based on polls showing that most Floridians want
an end to the U.S. trade embargo and travel ban against Cuba. This trend
is apparent even in Miami-Dade, where many younger Cuban Americans and
non-Cuban Hispanics believe the embargo should be lifted.
Crist declared the same thing publicly in February at Versailles
restaurant in Little Havana, a boldly chosen venue. It was a 180-degree
swing from his position when he was governor, and also when he was
running for the U.S. Senate.
A newly minted Democrat, Crist says it's time for a new strategy toward
Cuba. Of the embargo he recently said, "The definition of insanity is
continuing to do the same thing over and over again and expect a
different result. This policy has not worked."
He's actually talking about futility, not insanity, but we get the
point. The embargo has been a costly, colossal failure, a propaganda
gift to the very regime it was meant to topple. This is not what you
call breaking news.
Nor, for that matter, is it shocking to see a headline reporting that
Crist has switched positions on a major issue. As I've said before,
you'll get whiplash trying to keep track of all his flip-flopping.
Still, based on the polls, it's probably safe for a politician running
statewide in Florida to come out in favor of normalizing relations with
Cuba. To travel there, however, is riskier.
Crist, who has already applied to the State Department for permission,
said he wants to meet there with "regular" Cuban citizens, not bureaucrats.
At the same time he conceded that his itinerary on the island would
likely be controlled by officials.
So it would basically be a government guided tour. Charlie won't be
strolling unescorted down the Malecón to chat with food vendors and
fishermen, who in any event would be cautious about what they said to him.
The potential for looking like a chump seems high, so why go? And why
now, stirring up an increasingly close and nasty gubernatorial race?
I can't imagine a particular photograph or video clip of Crist tooling
around Havana that would move an undecided Florida voter in his
direction. The embargo is a federal matter, and the governor is helpless
to do anything about it.
Another good reason for Crist to stay here is that his trip would give
loads of ammo to Gov. Rick Scott's camp, which is spending a fortune on
political ads trying to undermine Crist's credibility even before the
Democratic primary.
Back in 2006, during his successful first run for governor, Crist
blistered his opponent for visiting Cuba. It was Rep. Jim Davis, a
Democrat, who had gone to the island a few years earlier.
Said Crist: "I understand that it's important not to go to Cuba when
she's under the dictatorship, but unfortunately the man I'm running
against doesn't understand that." These comments came, ironically, at
Versailles in Little Havana.
Two years later, as governor, Crist signed a law aimed at discouraging
charter flights to the island.
It required travel companies that organized Cuba trips to post a
$250,000 bond.
During his failed bid for the Senate, Crist reiterated his support of
both the travel ban and embargo.
Today, he says his thinking changed after talking to many Cuban
Americans, young and old.
Oh, and then there's the politics:
"As a Republican, it is expected and anticipated you'll be for the
embargo. And, of course, back in the day I was trying to be a good team
player and being a round peg trying to fit into a square hole, as
awkward as that was for me many times."
Classic Charlie. He doesn't duck from the flip-flopping accusations. He
just smiles and admits he goes with the flow.
He hopes to be accompanied to Havana by Florida academics, business
people and development experts. He said lifting the embargo would have a
huge positive impact on the state's economy, which is indisputably true.
But there's nothing he can personally do to make that happen.
Lots of prominent persons have toured Cuba, including popes, pop stars
and politicians. Few had as much at stake as Crist does.
Pope Benedict XVI even stood for a photograph with Raúl Castro.
Earth to Charlie: Don't even think about it.
Source: Charlie, this flip-flop's a bad idea - Carl Hiaasen -
MiamiHerald.com -
http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/05/17/4121569/charlie-this-flip-flops-a-bad.html
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