Los Angeles Times

Cuba ready to transition from Castro brothers

Next leader will not be from ruling family. But the nation will stay true to revolution and Communist Party.

- By Patrick J. McDonnell

HAVANA — In many ways, it seemed a day like any other in the Western Hemisphere’s only communist nation.

Young Cubans gathered at wireless hot spots here in the capital to connect their smartphone­s. Taxis — vintage Chevrolets and Buicks and other classics — lined up outside hotels catering to Europeans and Canadians.

As the sun set, families strolled along the seaside Malecon, dodging the spray from waves pounding the signature sea wall.

But the overriding sense of normality here Wednesday belied the historic significan­ce of the moment.

Cuba is about to embark on its most momentous political transition since 1959, when Fidel Castro and his bearded co-revolution­aries seized power in Havana, ousting the U.S.-backed dictator Fulgencio Batista — and triggering an almost unbroken era of enmity between Havana and Washington.

For the first time in almost six decades, the man leading Cuba will not be named Castro.

Raul Castro, the 86-yearold president whose brother

Fidel died in 2016, is expected to step down Thursday after a decade in power. The 605member Cuban legislatur­e is expected to name First Vice President Miguel Diaz-Canel, a relatively littleknow­n Communist Party functionar­y, as his successor. The president is believed to have handpicked him.

Diaz-Canel, 57, an electronic­s engineer by training, also represents a generation­al shift in leadership. He is destined to become the first Cuban leader born after the revolution.

He will be tasked with meeting the demands of a population of more than 11 million Cubans, most of whom are far removed from the khaki-clad Castro and other octogenari­an veterans of the storied revolution.

The new president will face daunting challenges, starting with the prospects of economic and, possibly, political reform in a oneparty state lumbering under a stagnant economy. He will also have to navigate a deteriorat­ing relationsh­ip with Washington. The Trump administra­tion has signaled a retreat from the policies of President Obama, who moved to improve U.S.-Cuban relations

“Raul Castro steps down at a difficult moment for Cuba and at a time when U.S. relations are likely to further fray following President Trump’s partial rollback of the U.S. opening,” said Jason Marzcak, director of the Adrienne Arsht Latin American Center at the Atlantic Council in Washington.

The very notion of a president who is not a Castro has generated considerab­le buzz and some apprehensi­on here. Still, Diaz-Canel’s ascent is widely seen as a well-choreograp­hed transition meant to perpetuate the rule of the Communist Party. No one seems to expect a major transforma­tion in how the country is run.

“There is great uncertaint­y among Cubans as to what will happen, but not great expectatio­n of change,” said Frank Abel Garcia, an independen­t Cuban journalist and blogger. “There’s the curiosity of what will happen with a president not named Castro.… But there are no expectatio­ns that there will be a change in the politics of the country. It’s the same. It’s the Communist Party.”

In fact, Raul Castro will remain for three more years as first secretary of the Communist Party, a powerful post from which to assess the actions of his successor.

The legacy of the Castro brothers includes free education and healthcare, but also political repression, desultory growth, a lack of social mobility and average monthly wages of about $30 for state workers — the majority of employees here.

The younger Castro’s 10year rule was a time of considerab­le reform and change, including an expansion of private industry; an economic outreach to the vast Cuban diaspora, which now has more opportunit­ies to invest in its homeland; an explosion in access to cellphones and computers; and increased freedom for travel from Cuba.

But last year, under the sway of hard-liners opposed to such reforms, the government slowed the trend toward gradual capitalism, reducing approvals for new businesses in the hospitalit­y industry and other fields.

The island was also hard hit by Hurricane Irma, which was especially destructiv­e to the sugar cane industry and other agricultur­e. And Cuba’s longtime benefactor, the left-wing government of Venezuela, is hard-pressed to curtail its own economic free fall.

Many here voice hope that the new president will reinvigora­te private-sector initiative­s.

Experts said that economic reform was likely and that one possible target is the country’s confused dual-currency system, which was created to protect state-run enterprise­s and domestic consumers and uses one kind of peso for Cubans and another for foreign visitors and investors.

A big question is what the handover of power will mean for U.S.-Cuba relations.

When Obama was president, Cubans had high hopes for an economic boom fueled by U.S. investment and tourism. That optimism has faded as the Trump administra­tion has tightened the reins on U.S.-Cuban commerce and made it harder for U.S. citizens to visit the island. The election of Trump also appears to have killed any chance of ending the U.S. trade embargo against Cuba.

Elevating tension is the fallout from unexplaine­d illnesses among U.S. diplomatic personnel in Havana, including hearing loss and brain injuries. Cuba has denied any effort to target U.S. diplomats in the alleged “sonic attacks.” But the U.S. has drasticall­y reduced its diplomatic staff here.

And, as Cuba’s economic woes continue to fuel an exodus of people, especially the young, the cutback in the U.S. diplomatic presence on the island has had another effect: slowing the processing of U.S. visas for Cubans seeking to visit the U.S. or emigrate. Many Cubans have opted to leave for Europe and elsewhere.

The new president is likely to face many demands from the island’s technologi­cally savvy youth.

“Young Cubans, especially those who have grown up with the technologi­cal revolution of the 21st century, seek more autonomy, liberty of movement, access to the internet, an end to censorship and repression, facilities to start up businesses, protection of the environmen­t and respect of the sexual orientatio­n of each person,” Cuban historian Rafael Rojas wrote in a column in Spain’s El Pais newspaper.

On Wednesday, the Cuban legislatur­e — formally the National Assembly of People’s Power — opened a session slated to result in a vote for the new president. A formal announceme­nt is expected on Thursday that Diaz-Canel has been voted in.

In anticipati­on of the handover, official Cuban TV, radio and social media have been broadcasti­ng a steady stream of spots with a succinct message: Despite the impending shift in leadership, the core values of the Cuban Revolution will not be compromise­d.

“Continuity” has been the recurring theme in the official word emanating from Havana. “#SomosConti­nuidad” (We are Continuity) is the dominant hashtag in government tweets.

“The people support the revolution completely,” said one young man who was among a number of Cubans interviewe­d on state TV. “Changes are necessary and we will support them.”

On the streets here, there was little sense of major impending change. Many people complained privately about low salaries, the high cost of living and poor chances for advancemen­t. But, in a nation where many fear police retributio­n, few voice such opinions publicly, especially to foreign media.

Still, a sense of hope came through in several interviews.

“I think all Cubans hope things will get better, that there will be more opportunit­ies, especially for the young,” said Jose E. Chavez, who has turned a flaming red 1959 Plymouth Fury into a taxi. “Let’s hope that’s the case with the new president. But it’s also true, we don’t want go back on the gains of the revolution.”

‘There is great uncertaint­y among Cubans as to what will happen, but not great expectatio­n of change.’

— Frank Abel Garcia, independen­t Cuban journalist

 ?? AFP/Getty Images ?? CUBAN President Raul Castro, left, is to step down Thursday. He is believed to have handpicked First Vice President Miguel Diaz-Canel, right, to succeed him.
AFP/Getty Images CUBAN President Raul Castro, left, is to step down Thursday. He is believed to have handpicked First Vice President Miguel Diaz-Canel, right, to succeed him.

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