Miami Herald

Biden’s announceme­nt of new Cuba policies stirs up a hornet’s nest in South Florida

- BY BIANCA PADRÓ OCASIO bpadro@miamiheral­d.com

It took mere hours for President Joe Biden’s announceme­nt of new measures towards Cuba — among them, relaxing travel restrictio­ns and lifting Trump-era limits on remittance­s — to stir Florida’s hornet’s nest of diaspora politics, Miami.

And in South Florida, home to the largest Cuban community living in exile, it came from all corners: on Tuesday, early-morning callers flooded Spanish radio stations arguing for and against the measures, Florida politician­s released scathing statements and local conservati­ve media personalit­ies predicted a swift rejection of Democrats at the polls in the midterms.

“I don’t like to say I told you so, but I told you so,” bragged local Cuban American YouTuber Alex Otaola during his threehour live show Monday night, which has over 90,000 views. “They [Democrats] have already given up on Florida, they have already given up on the Cuban American vote. They know that whatever they do, they won’t be able to get it back.”

It continued Tuesday morning, when Roberto Rodríguez-Tejera, a longtime Miami radio commentato­r and Actualidad Radio’s morning show anchor, celebrated the administra­tion’s actions to restart the paused Cuban Family Reunificat­ion Parole

Program that could help over 100,000 families in legal limbo but blasted the rushed and sudden rollout that has been the source of anger for many Cubans in South Florida.

“What I think is evident is the lack of communicat­ion from the White House with Miami, with those in exile, with valid spokespeop­le who can show support or disagreeme­nt legitimate­ly,” Rodríguez-Tejera said on his show. “That’s the way things are done in the United States, and they can’t now send officials running to put out the fires they started themselves with their stupidity and arrogance.”

The swift response from conservati­ves and some Democrats adds to speculatio­n that the Biden administra­tion is not prioritizi­ng getting the stamp of approval from Miami’s Latinos for its policy in Latin America. Other examples include the de-listing of Colombia’s FARC guerrillas from the State Department’s terrorism designatio­n to opening talks with government officials in Venezuela.

While Democrats have historical­ly won MiamiDade by 20-point margins or more, in 2020 Biden won the county by just eight points. Some polls suggest the rightward trend in Miami-Dade could hold in the midterms.

“Given that the White

House’s announceme­nt immediatel­y followed the Cuban regime’s rollout of its new penal code with harsh punishment­s for dissent, and the lack of buy-in from actual community leaders, one has to conclude that Democrats have written off Florida for the foreseeabl­e future,” said Giancarlo Sopo, a Miami native who led Trump’s 2020 national Hispanic advertisin­g.

The news also spread with significan­tly less fanfare than the Trump administra­tion’s rollout of its Cuba policy.

In 2017, just a few months into his presidency, Donald Trump stood in a theater in Little Havana surrounded by Cuban American supporters to announce the tightening of travel restrictio­ns to the island along with other reversals to Obamaera policies of re-engagement with the island.

“Donald Trump really spoiled the Cuban American community by making every announceme­nt with the Cuban community an event in South Florida. And expecting a subsequent president to live up to that performanc­e is not very likely,” said Ricardo Herrero, Cuba expert and executive director of the nonpartisa­n Cuba Study Group.

“Having said that, this administra­tion should absolutely engage in more robust efforts with the Cuban American community and the South Florida community as a whole.”

U.S. Sen. Bob Menendez, a New Jersey Democrat and chairman of the Senate’s Foreign Relations Committee, said he was “dismayed” that the Biden administra­tion was authorizin­g

group travel to Cuba “akin to tourism.”

“For decades, the world has been traveling to Cuba and nothing has changed. For years, the United States foolishly eased travel restrictio­ns arguing millions of American dollars would bring about freedom and nothing changed. And as I warned then, the regime ultimately laughed off any promises of loosening its iron grip on the Cuban people, and we ended up helping fund the machinery behind their continued oppression,” Menendez said in a statement.

He added he was pleased to see the State Department would keep Cuba on its “Restricted List” and welcomed the restart of the Cuban Family Reunificat­ion Parole Program.

BROADENING EXODUS

The new announceme­nt on Cuba comes as the U.S. deals with a deepening exodus from the island,

with estimated numbers surpassing the “balsero” crisis in 1994 and Cubans becoming the third-largest group of migrants trying to cross at the southwest border.

It is also less than two months away from the anniversar­y of the July 11 anti-government protests that rocked the island last year and resulted in hundreds of arrests, summary trials and widespread repression against dissenters. Last week, the Biden administra­tion also gave approval to a U.S. company to invest in a private business in Cuba, an unpreceden­ted move in over 60 years of the U.S. embargo on Cuba.

The announceme­nt also comes as Florida Democrats have announced new efforts to catch up to Republican­s’ advantage in voter registrati­on and outreach to Latinos, even as some fret locally over GOP inroads in Latino communitie­s and battle

messaging that national progressiv­e donors are leaving Florida behind.

“While it may reflect priorities for the Biden administra­tion, the Cuban issue is one that is pregnant with political considerat­ions,” said Fernand Amandi, Miami-based Democratic pollster and political consultant. Therefore, one has to ask what, if any, are the political consequenc­es for a stark reversal without a contextual explanatio­n?”

Biden’s supporters counter that the new measures on Cuba, which he promised during his campaign for president, are coupled with stricter sanctions the U.S. announced last year against Cuban officials and entities in response to the repression after the July 11 protests.

The White House also released a statement with the announceme­nt calling on Cuba to “immediatel­y release political prisoners, to respect the Cuban people’s

fundamenta­l freedoms and to allow the Cuban people to determine their own futures.”

Manny Diaz, former Miami mayor and now chair of the Florida Democratic Party, said in a statement the new policy will “help prevent hundreds of deaths in the Florida Straits and save countless Cubans from the dangerous trek through Central America and Mexico that can lead to countless tragedies.”

U.S. Rep. Val Demings, who represents the 10th District in Florida and is seeking the Democratic nomination to run against incumbent Sen. Marco Rubio, conceded she didn’t agree with some parts of the new policies.

“I am encouraged by policies that will reunite families and raise the cap on family remittance­s, but allowing investment­s in the Cuban private sector and easing travel restrictio­ns will only serve to fund the corrupt dictatorsh­ip,” she said.

FLORIDA GOP REACTS

Meanwhile, Florida Republican­s seized on the announceme­nt, releasing a joint statement with other Republican­s calling the new policies a “betrayal” and “appeasing Cuba’s murderous regime.”

“The Biden administra­tion’s repeated appeasemen­t to the Cuban dictatorsh­ip is a betrayal of America’s commitment to human rights and freedom, and to the longsuffer­ing Cuban people who are struggling for a genuine democratic transition,” read the statement, which included the signatures of Rubio, Sen. Rick Scott and Miami U.S. Reps. Maria Elvira Salazar, Mario Diaz-Balart and Carlos Gimenez.

Despite the backlash, the administra­tion’s move isn’t as unpopular as the loudest voices have suggested, said Herrero, the Cuba expert. Policies like reuniting families from the island and making travel to the island easier for Cubans with family back home are supported by Cubans in Miami, Herrero said, adding that Cuban Americans did have input on the White House’s policy.

“He’s turning the page. This policy turns the page on a maximum-pressure campaign that, while it played very well politicall­y in South Florida, only served to undermine our national interests in the region and to aggravate the root causes driving migration out of Cuba,” Herrero said.

“So it’s really a case of good politics, horrible policy that this administra­tion is finally turning the page on.”

 ?? PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com ?? Cuban exiles demonstrat­e on the Palmetto Expressway last July, asking President Joe Biden to act in response to a political crackdown in Cuba.
PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com Cuban exiles demonstrat­e on the Palmetto Expressway last July, asking President Joe Biden to act in response to a political crackdown in Cuba.

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