Friday, March 13, 2015

Cuba libre - How exiled Cubans are responding to the island’s opening

Cuba libre
How exiled Cubans are responding to the island's opening
Mar 14th 2015 | From the print edition

BEFORE FELICE GORORDO, a young Cuban-American entrepreneur, first
visited his homeland in 2002, he had to endure a titanic row with his
parents. His mother and father are stern Republicans, like many who left
in the first decades of the Castro regime, and saw travel to the island
as a betrayal of the revolution's victims.

Mr Gorordo's mother had two uncles, one of whom supported the revolution
and stayed whereas the other one fought the Communists and was jailed
before heading for America. Yet when Mr Gorordo at last met his
relatives on the island, he found that the schism was not as deep as he
had feared. He saw photographs of himself and his family in Florida,
sent to Cuba by his exiled uncle who had quietly maintained ties with
letters and parcels. Then his 13-year-old cousin walked into the room,
sporting a familiar outfit. "He didn't just look like me and sound like
me, he was wearing my clothes," Mr Gorordo recalls. After that visit Mr
Gorordo founded Roots of Hope, a non-partisan youth group which promotes
engagement with the island.

significance. More than one presidential election was arguably swung by
America's 2m-strong community of Cubans, who are more conservative than
other Hispanics and mostly live in the swing state of Florida. Since the
cold war Cubans have, in essence, enjoyed automatic rights to political
asylum and permanent residency the moment they set foot on American
soil. That has made them something of a resented elite among Hispanics.

Mr Gorordo's group avoids commenting publicly on President Obama's
decision in December last year to seek diplomatic ties with Cuba and to
ease curbs on travel and trade with the island (only Congress can fully
lift the 55-year-old Cuban embargo). What he will say, with confidence,
is that America's Cuba policy is less often a vote-deciding "wedge
issue" among his younger members.

Polls suggest that greater engagement with Cuba is backed by hefty
majorities of younger Cuban-Americans, and by those who went into exile
following an economic crisis in the early 1990s. Alejandro Barreras, an
advertising executive, left Cuba in 1992. He feels no love for either
the Castro regime or for old-school hardliners in Florida who complain
that money invested in Cuba props up the regime. Mr Barreras disagrees:
in the long run, "private economic activity makes people less dependent
on the Cuban state."

Florida's politicians are adapting. Carlos Giménez, the 61-year-old
centrist Republican mayor of Miami-Dade County, has not seen his Cuban
homeland since leaving in 1960.But he does not condemn constituents who
travel back and forth to support relatives.

Local political reactions to the presidential plan fall into three broad
camps. Hardliners oppose "rewarding" the Castro regime with negotiations
of any sort. Liberals would support a unilateral end to the embargo. A
middle camp (including Mr Giménez) does not exactly claim that the
embargo has worked, but accuses Mr Obama of offering concessions without
any guarantees of reform from Cuba.

In the 2016 presidential elections younger Cuban-Americans will be less
likely to support Republicans, but older conservatives remain much
likelier to vote. Only about a third of Cubans who have arrived since
the 1990s have progressed from residency to full citizenship. At the
same time the Cuban vote has become more diluted by the inflow of other
ethnic groups. With luck, relations with Cuba could stop being a hostage
to domestic politics and become just another aspect of foreign policy.

Source: Cuban-Americans: Cuba libre | The Economist -
http://www.economist.com/news/special-report/21646000-how-exiled-cubans-are-responding-islands-opening-cuba-libre

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