Cape Times

Cuba’s new president: what to expect

- William M LeoGrande LeoGrande is Professor of Government, American University

The leadership transition is still significan­t though. It marks the first time the leader of the Communist Party and the leader of the Cuban government will be different people

LEADERSHIP changes don’t happen often in Cuba – there’s been just one since 1959 in fact. That was in 2006, when President Fidel Castro fell ill and was replaced by his brother, Raúl.

Raúl Castro turned out to be a real agent of change. But after two terms as president, the 86-year-old is stepping down. Today, the National Assembly will meet to pick Cuba’s next leader.

And for the first time in six decades, his last name will not be Castro.

This is a momentous occasion – one of the most important I’ve seen in 40 years of studying and writing on Cuba. For any state born in revolution, the first transfer of power to a new generation is always politicall­y risky.

Raúl Castro’s successor must develop Cuba’s economy, contend with the US and deal with a growing chorus of critics. And he will have to tackle these tasks while the Communist Party is still dominated by Fidel’s revolution­ary comrades, who have sharp disagreeme­nts on all these issues.

The clear favourite to replace Raúl Castro is Cuba’s 57-year-old First Vice-President Miguel DíazCanel. His ascension would represent a transfer of power away from the “historic generation” that waged Cuba’s 1959 revolution, many of whom are now pushing 90.

In 2011, Raúl Castro mandated a two-term limit for senior government and party officials. It “is never positive” for the elderly to cling to power, he declared.

But the charisma of Fidel Castro, who died in 2016, has been a pillar of Cuba’s regime. Díaz-Canel – a trained engineer who worked his way up from provincial party leader to first vice-president – will have to earn his authority through performanc­e.

Those who have followed his career say Díaz-Canel is a seasoned, pragmatic politician. He is apparently a bit stiff in front of large audiences but relaxed and congenial in small groups – much like his mentor, Raúl Castro.

As president, Díaz-Canel would still benefit from Raul Castro’s experience and authority. Castro remains first secretary of the Communist Party – Cuba’s only party – until 2021.

This is arguably a post more powerful than the presidency.

The party leadership makes all major economic, social and foreign relations policies, which the president is obliged to carry out.

So I don’t expect any drastic changes in direction from DíazCanel – at least, not right away.

The leadership transition is still significan­t though. It marks the first time that the leader of the Communist Party and the leader of the Cuban government will be different people. Both Fidel and Raúl Castro held both positions simultaneo­usly.

Cuba must now sort out the lines of authority between party and state. As Díaz-Canel staffs government ministries with his own team, he will gain ever more control over how policy is interprete­d and implemente­d.

The new president will face some tough issues.

Cuba’s economy is struggling, dragged down in particular by the dual-currency system Fidel Castro adopted in 1994 to attract cash remittance­s from Cuban expats. Raúl Castro has declared that currency reunificat­ion “cannot be delayed any longer”.

But turning two currencies into one is a tricky business with unpredicta­ble economic consequenc­es. And unlike almost every other country in the world, Cuba cannot turn to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund or World Bank for support because it withdrew from them after the revolution.

Díaz-Canel will also face pressure to reinvigora­te the Cuban economy by pushing ahead with Raúl Castro’s controvers­ial economic reform programme. Castro loosened restrictio­ns on private enterprise and foreign investment in Cuba early in his tenure, but the pace of change has since slowed.

If Díaz-Canel opens up Cuba’s economy too quickly, he’ll alienate Communist Party conservati­ves. Going too slowly will anger reformers, not to mention frustrate the Cuban people.

Another contentiou­s issue facing Cuba’s incoming president is freedom of expression. Public criticism of the regime has grown as more Cubans connect to the internet.

Last year, hard-liners launched a campaign vilifying critical bloggers, which – to many onlookers’ surprise – Díaz-Canal supported. Other prominent Cubans pushed back, though, and the campaign ultimately ended without any of the targeted websites being closed down.

Raul Castro balanced conflictin­g factions with a delicate strategy he described as reform “without haste, but without pause”.

He also benefited from unquestion­ed authority in the party. Díaz-Canel will have to establish his own legitimacy.

Finally, Díaz-Canel must deal with the mercurial Trump administra­tion, which has largely outsourced Cuba policy to the conservati­ve Cuban-Americans in Congress. This faction, led by Senator Marco Rubio, a Republican from Florida, denounced Barack Obama’s restoratio­n of US-Cuba relations. Although Trump declared he was “cancelling” Obama’s policy, he has so far left most Obama-era commercial openings untouched.

In October, Trump further battered bilateral ties by downsizing the US embassy in Cuba after US government staff suffered unexplaine­d health problems there. He also expelled 17 Cuban diplomats from Washington.

Recent Trump appointmen­ts do not bode well for the future of US-Cuban relations.

The incoming secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, was a vocal opponent of Obama’s rapprochem­ent with Havana. And national security adviser John Bolton once deemed Cuba part of an “axis of evil”, falsely accusing it of developing biological weapons.

In December, I was in Havana, a city where the benefits of Raúl Castro’s economic reforms are most tangible. Cubans I spoke with there seemed ready for younger leadership and excited about the impending power transition.

Loosened economic restrictio­ns have led to a surge of investment in Havana over the past decade.

But 80% of Cubans have always had a Castro as their president. So the anticipato­ry mood is leavened by trepidatio­n. People fear that change at the top could bring instabilit­y.

If Díaz-Canel can deliver on the economy – the top priority for most Cubans – he’ll be judged a success. If not, he will face a rising tide of discontent from a population impatient for change. – The Conversati­on

 ?? Picture: GCIS ?? FAVOURED: Then deputy president Cyril Ramaphosa during a meeting with the first Vice-President of Cuba, Miguel Díaz-Canel, in Havana. Díaz-Canel is the clear favourite to replace Raul Castro as leader.
Picture: GCIS FAVOURED: Then deputy president Cyril Ramaphosa during a meeting with the first Vice-President of Cuba, Miguel Díaz-Canel, in Havana. Díaz-Canel is the clear favourite to replace Raul Castro as leader.

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