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Culture > Cuba > Havana shocker
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Havana shocker

by PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Feb 3, 2008 at 03:58 PM

Havana shocker
February 2, 2008

Fidel Castro's kid brother upstaged him at the ballot box this month, 
collecting the most votes of any candidate for the National Assembly. 
Running for separate seats representing the eastern city of Santiago de 
Cuba, the brothers -- surprise! -- won handily, as did all 612 other 
candidates selected by the Cuban Communist Party. All were unopposed.

Still, the races were sufficiently suspenseful to draw a voter turnout 
of 96 percent, a testament to civic activism in a nation whose citizens 
are kind of sure voting is voluntary. And who says their voices aren't 
heard? Thanks to the handful of Cubans who didn't put a check mark next 
to Fidel's name, he ended up with a mere 98.2 percent of the vote. Raul 
got 99.4.

Given the political situation in Cuba these days -- Raul's in charge 
while Fidel recovers from some vague abdominal ailment -- it's tempting 
to jump to conclusions about what will happen when the new assembly 
meets Feb. 24. Its members will select a Council of State, the executive 
branch whose president doubles as president of Cuba. That post has been 
held only by Fidel.

His No. 2 finish in the Jan. 20 election has some wishful thinkers 
speculating that Raul will formally ascend, and that could happen -- but 
not because he outpolled his brother. Raul came in first in 2005, too, 
getting 99.75 percent to Fidel's 99.01 percent. Not since Saddam Hussein 
won 100 percent of the vote in Iraq's 2002 election have voters returned 
such an unambiguous result, but Fidel got the nod over Raul that year, 
anyway.

And that's what will happen this time, too, unless Fidel steps aside. 
Though he hasn't been seen publicly since ceding authority to Raul in 
July 2006, his lackeys say he's still involved in all major decisions. 
 From his sickbed, the 81-year-old president files regular anti-American 
screeds for the state-run paper, Granma, and he was feeling good enough 
this week to denounce President Bush's State of the Union address as 
"the worst for its demagoguery, lies and total lack of ethics."

In December, after he was formally nominated for the National Assembly, 
Fidel Castro wrote a letter to be read on state-run television, assuring 
the Cuban people that he would not "cling to office" indefinitely or 
stand in the way of a new generation of leaders. Whether that means 
76-year-old Raul or 14-year-old Elian Gonzalez is anyone's guess. But if 
lawmakers name Raul the president this month, it will be because Fidel 
told them to.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/chi-0202edit2feb02,0,1703869.story
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Havana shocker
PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL P  2008-02-03 15:58:02 

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