Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

FIU poll: Most Miami Cuban Americans support Trump

But most disagree with president’s immigratio­n policy

- By Nora Gamez Torres

A majority of CubanAmeri­cans in Miami-Dade County approve of President Donald Trump’s handling of the economy, health and Cuba policy, and will vote for him in the upcoming November elections, according to the latest edition of the Cuba poll from Florida Internatio­nal University.

Fifty-nine percent of Cuban-Americans interviewe­d said they would vote to reelect Trump. Only 25% said they would vote for Democratic candidate Joe Biden.

The telephone survey, which was released on Friday, included 1,002 participan­ts who were interviewe­d between July 7 and Aug. 17. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points.

The results indicate that the majority of CubanAmeri­can voters support the administra­tion’s policies toward Cuba on issues such as maintainin­g the embargo (54%), the sanctions campaign to force a regime change on the island (68%), and the eliminatio­n of cruise ships (55%).

There is only one issue Cuban Americans disagree on with Trump’s Cuba policies: immigratio­n. Fiftyeight percent of respondent­s oppose the suspension of visa issuing at the U.S. Embassy inHavana and the family reunificat­ion program.

The study, carried out by FIU every two years since the 1990s, also shows the paradoxes and mixed views in the community. For example, although the majority

favors maintainin­g the embargo, 66% of those surveyed also believe that it has not worked or has not worked very well. And 57% support suspending the sanctions during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The contrastin­g opinions regarding Cuba policy, from support of engagement policies under President Barack Obama to the strong backing of Trump’s hardline measures, suggest “Cubans are just part of American politics and follow the leadership in issues that relate to them,” said Guillermo Grenier, the study’s director and head of FIU’s Department of Global and Sociocultu­ral Studies.

Despite the popularity of Trump’s policies, the study shows that the Cuban American community also supports some of Obama’s measures, such asmaintain­ing diplomatic relations with Cuba and implementi­ng policies supporting the Cuban people. But in general, Cuba policy is not a priority issue for Cuban American voters, with the economy and healthcare topping the list.

“It is not surprising that the poll measures a certain amount of ambivalenc­e in the population,” Grenier

said. “Most Cubans desire change in Cuba and in the U.S. Cuba policy. They are unclear, even after 60 years of experience, whether isolation or engagement will bring about change, so they are leaving the door open to more engagement while signaling that, perhaps due to the leadership provided by Trump and his administra­tion, they are willing to give isolation policies their support. Still, both tendencies are evident in the community.”

The biggest surprise in the results is the inroads the Republican Party has made in the community, especially among Cubans who recently arrived in the country, Grenier said. Seventyper­cent of those surveyed who came to the U.S. between 2010 and 2015 said they are Republican­s.

Possible explanatio­ns for such Republican “rejuvenati­on” are the party’s and the Trump administra­tion’s strong presence in MiamiDade, Grenier said. “It is a natural attraction for those people who come and want to feel part of the community, whowant to feelempowe­red. Historical­ly, the Republican­Party has been better at talking to Cubans than the Democratic Party.”

But attitudes toward the Cuban government might also be at work in recent arrivals’ strong support for hard-line policies and the GOP more generally. The trend had been picked up in a 2019 survey by Democratic pollster Equis Research.

“Those who arrived between 2010 to 2015 aren’t batistiano­s. They are a direct product of the Revolution. The Cuban government’s policies and resistance to reforms continue to create generation­al waves of opposition,” said RicHerrero, the Cuba Study Group’s executive director. “But instead of granting them representa­tion at home, the system casts its aggrieved citizens off to Florida, where they do vote.”

The results confirm the trend of strong support for Trump among Cuban Americans, which previous surveys had found. Cuban Americans make up the baseof theRepubli­canParty in Miami-Dade and themajorit­y of registered Hispanic voters in the county, so their vote could make a difference in one of the nation’s top swing states.

Andthe survey shows the gains made by Trump since 2016, when he won an estimated 54% of the Cuban American vote.

Support for the president is so strong in thecommuni­ty that Miami-Dade Cuban Americans have become the country’s outliers, even giving high approval to his handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Forty-one percent of the respondent­s said they “strongly support” and 22% said they “somewhat support” Trump’s response to the COVID-19 crisis. Only Democrats, those whowere born in the U.S., and independen­ts voiced opposition.

 ?? MIKE STOCKER/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL ?? President Donald Trump acknowledg­es the crowd after appearing at the Latinos For Trump Roundtable at the Trump National Doral Miami in Doral on Sept. 25.
MIKE STOCKER/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL President Donald Trump acknowledg­es the crowd after appearing at the Latinos For Trump Roundtable at the Trump National Doral Miami in Doral on Sept. 25.

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