Stabroek News

Cuba calls national election a ‘home run,’ opposition groups cry foul

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(Reuters) - Cuba said yesterday that voters had elected all 470 candidates for the National Assembly on the ballot over the weekend, calling the results a “home run,” while opposition groups critiqued the elections as a farce.

Election officials said yesterday that the initial turnout was 75.9%, topping participat­ion in municipal elections in November and a referendum on the Cuban family code, which legalized gay marriage, in September.

“We want to thank our people ... for participat­ing in a massive way in this electoral process of transcende­ntal importance for the present and the future of the nation,” Alina Balseiro, president of Cuba’s National Electoral Council, said on state-run TV.

Participat­ion in Sunday’s election was widely seen by both pro- and anti-government groups as a proxy for gauging support for Cuba’s communist leadership at a time of deep economic crisis and growing social unrest.

Though three of every four Cubans voted Sunday, that rate was still nearly 10 percentage points below participat­ion in 2018 legislativ­e elections and well below all previous

elections under late President Fidel Castro, when nearly every Cuban of voting age typically cast a ballot.

President Miguel Diaz-Canel, who led a government campaign to encourage turnout on Sunday, called the results a “win” for Cuba.

“The numbers say more than words,” Diaz-Canel said on Twitter. “It’s a clean home run.”

Opposition groups, primarily outside of Cuba, had encouraged voters to stay home in protest, calling the election a “farce” in a one-party system with no formal opposition or internatio­nal oversight.

The U.S. embassy in Havana called the elections “antidemocr­atic” on social media.

Cuba defends its single-party system, saying it promotes unity and limits the sway of money in elections.

The 470 candidates on Sunday’s paper ballot were vying for 470 open seats in the legislatur­e. There were no opposition candidates.

In order to win a place in the National Assembly, a candidate must, however, receive more than half the votes of those who cast ballots.

Balseiro said 72% of voters had chosen an option on ballots that allowed them to vote for all the candidates in one go, meaning that all 470 contenders were elected.

Watchdog organizati­ons including rights group Cubalex, which has received funding from the U.S.backed National Endowment for Democracy, alleged that independen­t observers, journalist­s and activists were harassed by Cuban state security, saw their internet cut, or were detained before or during the elections.

Cuba’s government did not immediatel­y reply to a request for comment on those allegation­s.

Cuba says it monitors its own elections and does not allow independen­t, internatio­nal observers to follow the proceeding­s.

Lawmakers elected on Sunday will serve for five years. In their first session, slated for April, they will choose the next president of Cuba from among their ranks.

 ?? REUTERS/Alexandre ?? A woman prepares her vote at a polling station during the legislativ­e elections in Havana, Cuba, March 26, 2023.
Meneghini
REUTERS/Alexandre A woman prepares her vote at a polling station during the legislativ­e elections in Havana, Cuba, March 26, 2023. Meneghini

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