Albuquerque Journal

Castro loyalist consolidat­es power in Cuba

- BY DAVID OVALLE AND MARIO PENTÓN

Miguel Díaz-Canel, the loyalist groomed to succeed Raúl Castro, on Monday was formally named chief of Cuba’s Communist Party, giving him unpreceden­ted civilian control of a nation grappling with a shattered economy, food shortages and a citizenry increasing­ly emboldened to criticize the government.

The long-expected consolidat­ion of power came after Castro, the former president and revolution­ary figure who helped his brother cement a communist regime in Cuba, officially announced his retirement at age 89.

Cuba’s Communist Party announced on Twitter that Díaz-Canel, the nation’s president, had been chosen as the party’s new first secretary. The appointmen­t comes on the last day of the Communist Party’s Eighth Congress, a carefully scripted event in Havana meant to herald the arrival of a new generation of leaders as the last of the old guard rebels depart amid the island’s worst economic crisis in decades.

Throughout the congress, 60-year-old Díaz-Canel — who was born after the revolution that ushered Fidel Castro into power — has pushed a theme of “continuity.” While Cuba is in urgent need of an economic jump start, few anticipate that his leadership will mark a significan­t departure from how the government operates, especially as he looks to consolidat­e the support of party loyalists.

“It’s been embedded in Cuba’s DNA — all the habits, the totalitari­an populism, the allergy to criticism, the repression of independen­t thought,” said Ted Henken, a Cuban expert at Baruch College in New York. “These habits will die very hard, whether it’s Díaz-Canel or somebody else.”

Díaz-Canel’s rise through the communist ranks has been years in the making. Widely considered a loyal bureaucrat, Díaz-Canel made his name as the party chief in two provinces before he was named vice president of the country in 2013. That’s when Raúl Castro announced he would vacate the presidency in 2018, handing it over to Díaz-Canel.

In 2018, Díaz-Canel became president, while Raúl Castro retained the more powerful role as the party’s first secretary.

In announcing his retirement Friday, the congress’ opening day, Raúl Castro heaped praise on Díaz-Canel, while also urging delegates to remain close to the core tenets of the nation’s Soviet-style economy, something he said he was certain his successor would continue to do.

“We have already said that Díaz-Canel is not the result of improvisat­ion, but a thoughtful selection of a young revolution­ary with the conditions to be promoted to higher positions,” Raúl Castro said.

In footage from the congress on Cuban state TV, Díaz-Canel spoke with delegates in a closed-door session about the need for new blood in the Communist party, saying he’s looking for “the best … the best revolution­ary qualities, the best ideologica­l qualities, the best profession­alism, charisma, work and experience.”

“I have to keep preparing them, defining what paths they are going to take,” he said.

Cuba’s leaders are under increasing pressure to improve the lives of its 11 million citizens. The island’s economy contracted 11% in 2020, according to government figures, as the pandemic halted tourism and then-President Donald Trump instituted a series of punishing economic sanctions designed to squeeze the Cuban government. Cuban citizens, as they have during previous hard times, are again forced to wait in long lines for goods. Remittance­s from the United States have dwindled under Trump sanctions and U.S. President Joe Biden has yet to undo any of the restrictio­ns.

This year, Cuba unified its dual currency system, a measure meant to make the economy easier to navigate for much-needed foreign investors. While some state salaries were increased, the prices of goods have neverthele­ss skyrockete­d. The government also announced an expansion of some small private businesses, a list that includes software programmin­g, small-scale veterinari­ans and music teachers — but doesn’t allow journalist­s, health care practition­ers or architects.

Shortly before the congress, Cuba announced it was loosening long-standing restrictio­ns on the sale of beef and dairy, and the slaughter of cows, allowing farmers to “do as they wish” with livestock as long as state quotas are met. The announceme­nt was made as the island is dealing with acute food shortages.

John Kavulich, president of the U.S.-Cuba Trade and Economic Council, said of Díaz-Canel: “I believe he very well may be a oneterm president … because he will have completed those transition tasks.”

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