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Raul Castro Proposes Political Term Limits In Cuba

Raul Castro Term Limits

By PETER ORSI   04/16/11 09:01 PM ET   AP

HAVANA -- Raul Castro proposed term limits Saturday for Cuban politicians – including himself – a remarkable gesture on an island ruled for 52 years by him and his brother. The 79-year-old president lamented the lack of young leaders in government, saying the country was paying the price for errors made in the past.

Castro told delegates to a crucial Communist Party summit that he would launch a "systematic rejuvenation" of the government. He said politicians and other important officials should be restricted to two consecutive five-year terms, including "the current president of the Council of State and his ministers" – a reference to himself.

Castro officially took over from his brother Fidel in 2008, meaning he would be at least 86 at the end of a second term, depending on how the law is written.

The proposal was made toward the end of a 2 1/2 hour speech in which the Cuban leader forcefully backed a laundry list of changes to the country's socialist economic system, including the eventual elimination of ration books and other subsidies, the decentralization of the island nation's economy and a new reliance on supply and demand in some sectors.

Still, he drew a line in the Caribbean sand as to which reforms should remain, telling party luminaries that he had rejected dozens of suggested reforms that would have allowed the concentration of property in private hands.

Castro said the country had ignored its problems for too long, and made clear Cuba had to make tough decisions if it wanted to survive.

"No country or person can spend more than they have," he said. "Two plus two is four. Never five, much less six or seven – as we have sometimes pretended."

Dressed in a white guayabera shirt, the Cuban leader alternated between reassurances that the economic changes were compatible with socialism, and a brutal assessment of the mistakes the country had made. Fidel Castro was not present for the speech.

Raul Castro said the monthly ration book of basic foods, perhaps the most cherished of subsidies, represented an "unbearable burden ... and a disincentive for work."

He said the changes he is proposing will come "without hurry, but without pause."

Still, he added that "there will never be room for shock therapy" in Cuba.

Of term limits, Castro said he and his brother had made various attempts to promote young leaders, but that they had not worked out well – perhaps a reference to the 2009 firing of Cuba's photogenic foreign minister and vice president, who were later accused of lusting too obviously for power.

"Today we face the consequences of not having a reserve of substitutes ready," Castro said.

Like the proposals on economic changes, the term-limit idea does not yet carry the force of law since the party gathering lacks the powers of parliament. But it's all but certain to be acted on quickly by the National Assembly.

The Communist Party is the only political organization recognized on the island, and most politicians are members. Cubans vote for municipal and national assemblies, which in turn elect senior leaders including the president. Currently there is no set limit on their terms.

Since taking office, Raul Castro has leased tens of thousands of hectares of fallow government land to small farmers, and enacted reforms that allow Cubans to go into business for themselves, rent out homes and hire employees.

Cubans are watching to see whether other changes emerge from the Congress – such as the end of a near-total ban on buying and selling private property, or details on promises to extend bank credits.

Raul Castro has also pledged to end Cuba's unusual two-tiered currency system, where wages are paid in pesos, while many imported goods are available only in a dollar-linked economy beyond most people's reach. The president, however, has said little about how or when he will accomplish that.

The other major prong of the modernization drive – a goal of laying off half a million state workers in jobs that are unproductive and redundant – has been delayed indefinitely.

Carmelo Mesa-Lago, a Florida-based Cuba economics expert, said the changes so far have not been sufficient to revive the island's sputtering economy, and more must be done.

Authorities need to expand private business licenses to the professional class to stop the brain drain, reduce taxes on earnings and deliver badly needed credit and training, among other measures, Mesa-Lago said.

"If you want to get rid of all this dead wood which costs a lot of money, and have money to be able to pay better wages, then you have to give priority to job creation," Mesa-Lago said. "You shouldn't be punishing these people who are trying to expand these jobs."

Also key is the question of the Communist Party's top leadership, which will be decided at the close of the Congress. Raul Castro presumably will be named to succeed older brother Fidel as first secretary, but it is unknown who may be tapped to be No. 2.

Castro's speech about rejuvenating the political system added to hopes that a younger politician might take up that mantle, perhaps signaling a preferred successor.

Castro himself has said the party gathering will likely be the last of its kind under the generation that launched the 1959 revolution, many of whom are already in their graves. Since the last party Congress in 1997, Cuba has lost such giants as Vilma Espin, Raul's wife and a major revolutionary figure in her own right; and Juan Almeida, a vice president and commander of the revolution who died last year.

Earlier Saturday, Cuba put on a rousing military and civilian parade to mark the 50th anniversary of the Bay of Pigs attack of 1961, when Fidel Castro's 2-year-old government routed an invasion force of some 1,200 Cuban exiles supported by the CIA.

Thousands of soldiers high-stepped through sprawling Revolution Plaza as a military band played martial music beneath the gaze of an iconic image of Ernesto "Che" Guevara. Helicopters whirred and jet fighters in combat formation roared overhead while freshly painted amphibious assault vehicles and rocket launchers rumbled past a saluting Raul Castro up on the dais. Before becoming president, Castro was head of the armed forces.

Behind the troops marched hundreds of thousands of Cubans who waved to Castro. "Long live Cuba! Long live Fidel! Long live Raul!" they shouted.

"It is a really good party," said Anaibis Fernandez, a 54-year-old employee at a Havana sports facility who was among the marchers. "There are a lot of people here, and it's very well organized."

___

Associated Press writers Anne-Marie Garcia, Andrea Rodriguez and Paul Haven contributed to this report.

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HAVANA -- Raul Castro proposed term limits Saturday for Cuban politicians – including himself – a remarkable gesture on an island ruled for 52 years by him and his brother. The 79-year-old...
HAVANA -- Raul Castro proposed term limits Saturday for Cuban politicians – including himself – a remarkable gesture on an island ruled for 52 years by him and his brother. The 79-year-old...
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11:29 AM on 04/18/2011
Great, after Castro family has screwed Cuba for half a century it's nice Raul supports term limits so no one else can do what they did.
06:52 AM on 04/18/2011
"Cubans vote for municipal and national assemblies, which in turn elect senior leaders including the president" And the people get "compelled" to vote for the nominated, and the nominated are apointed efter their membership to the ONE Party and the grade of performance of the Revolutions principles. Try to imagine that level of performance when NOBODY believes in those principles anymore!
06:46 AM on 04/18/2011
Correction: "The Communist Party is the only political organization recognized on the island, and most politicians are members" ALL POLITICIANS ARE MEMBERS! You cannot be an official politician in Cuba without that membership.
iflew
Dyno Remediator
08:29 PM on 04/17/2011
Cubans have relatives in Florida and a few other places. They have likely seen the imperfections in the US as well as their own country.

Not spending more than they have sounds like they paid close attention to the US. They are by necessity using intensive agriculture putting more back into the ground than we do. They lack our chemical fertilizers. They will be in excellent shape for solar and wind power. Cell phones should work as well. They can eliminate the whole grid problem we have. They have no huge oil companies or power companies to slow post oil development.

The US should pay them some nominal amount for usng Gitmo.

Bring them back into US tourist trade!
Cacey
Ignore rudeness, honor discussion
07:54 PM on 04/17/2011
The full recognition of Cuba is not a Republican vs. Democratic issue but in fact is supported by many on both sides.  While the Democrats see no logic in not recognizing Cuba while we recognize China and Vietnam, there are many Republicans who see Cuba as an excellent market for farm products and technology as well as hotels and US originated tourism.   Those who criticize recognition are holding on to a world that is no longer.
iflew
Dyno Remediator
08:48 PM on 04/17/2011
True you are. We can't expect other countries of the world to adopt our democratic form of secular government while they are seeing our flaws. We are drifting into a theocratic influence and our wealthy and powerful are demonstrating malevolence toward our own non wealthy population. Maybe Cubans would be better served by a benevolent dictatorship.
Cacey
Ignore rudeness, honor discussion
10:44 PM on 04/17/2011
I had a high school teacher who said that the best form of government was a benevolent dictatorship and to a large extent that is true at certain phases in their history.  But at this point, I believe Cuba is ready for a democracy and Raul Castro stated that the issue is the lack of younger leadership.  Perhaps someone will emerge.  I hope so. 
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Chapin Smith
I am His Noodly Appendage
06:20 PM on 04/17/2011
These are very promising reforms.
06:03 PM on 04/17/2011
‎"Embarrassment"??? No.... after 50 years you cannot call it embarrassment!! Cuba and its Communist system ARE an EPIC FAIL!!!
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bllnsinchnge
peace, markets, freedom
05:43 PM on 04/17/2011
si! , tu puedes Raul
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Christopher Hull
Democratic Socialist
05:17 PM on 04/17/2011
My favorite part of the article is the "no shock therapy in Cuba." This is a direct jab at the IMF, World Bank and the hedge funds that all make money investing in a developing country then blow up its economy. Money on the ride up and money on the ride down.
Good for him.
Have the Castros been bad for Cuba? Time will tell. However there is always time for change and progress. Perhaps they are trying to make up for some past mistakes.
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CigarGod
What is your process?
06:08 PM on 04/17/2011
Great medical care, lower infant mortality than the USA, low crime, 100% literacy...just to name a few.
I think, "time has already told".
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Christopher Hull
Democratic Socialist
06:30 PM on 04/17/2011
I haven't been there so I can't speak to that. I do think his choice of words is deliberate however. So I salute their stand!
05:02 PM on 04/17/2011
I wish the people of Cuba well.
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bllnsinchnge
peace, markets, freedom
04:29 PM on 04/17/2011
Why are we trading with Vietnam and not with Cuba, 90 miles from Florida?

Say hello to your new politicians, same as the other dweebs.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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doriath22
Born-again Jacobin. Robespierre had the right idea
04:21 PM on 04/17/2011
As Mr Alba has pointed out, I may have used an overly broad brush in speaking of the exile community. Undoubtedly many decent people were driven from their homes in the wake of the revolution. My high school Spanish teacher, and her husband, a university professor come to mind as exemplars of this. Nevertheless, many of the leaders of the exile community (at least the first generation) were full participants in the criminal kleptocracy that ran Cuba, with the help of the US government, for the first half of the 20th century. .
FreeAmerican7
It's hard to soar like an Eagle around Turkeys!
09:00 AM on 04/19/2011
"..........were full participan­ts in the criminal kleptocrac­y that
ran Cuba,
with the help of the US government­,.............."

Never forget the
Jewish Mafia & Batista!
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
03:21 PM on 04/17/2011
In case anyone wonders why Castro's government remained while the Soviet-backed governments in Eastern Europe fell, it's because the Eastern Bloc governments got installed by a foreign power, and thus had no true legitimacy, while Castro's government came about on its own, ousting a brutal thug. The Soviet-backed regimes in Poland, Czechoslovakia, etc, had no more legitimacy than the US-installed regimes in Guatemala, Nicaragua, etc.
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Cannonball Taffy O Jones
Khaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaan!
03:39 PM on 04/17/2011
How many elections has Castro won?
Cacey
Ignore rudeness, honor discussion
04:45 PM on 04/17/2011
Actually one.  The one in which the majority of Cuban people installed him in office overthowing a brutal dicator.
03:19 PM on 04/17/2011
Sweeping reforms in Cuba will not happen until the Castro brothers and their Marxist government is gone.
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pietromp
Always believe...in yourself that is!!!
03:24 PM on 04/17/2011
So how long does the US have to wait for "sweeping reforms" or who has to go before they start?
iflew
Dyno Remediator
08:35 PM on 04/17/2011
Although not technically correct I prefer the sound of Castro Gov and Marx Bros.
03:17 PM on 04/17/2011
Cuba will be the next spot for call centers and tech support.