Miami Herald

A change at the top: Díaz-Canel replaces Castro as Communist Party chief

- BY DAVID OVALLE AND MARIO PENTÓN dovalle@miamiheral­d.com mpenton@elnuevoher­ald.com

Miguel Díaz-Canel, the loyalist groomed to succeed Raúl Castro, on Monday was formally named chief of Cuba’s Communist Party, giving him consolidat­ed control of a nation grappling with a shattered economy, food his retirement at age 89.

Raúl Castro himself made the announceme­nt on the last day of the Communist Party’s 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.

Delegates rose from their seats and applauded as Díaz-Canel approached the stage, embraced Castro and launched into a speech in which he said the Cuban revolution “is alive and well in the midst of the gale that is shaking the world.” Díaz-Canel wore a black suit, while Castro donned his usual olive-green military uniform. The new party chief vowed to consult his predecesso­r on “strategic decisions for the future of the nation.”

“The army general will always be present because he is a reference for any Cuban communist,” DíazCanel said in an excerpt of the speech, which wasbroadca­st on Cuban state television.

Throughout the Congress, the 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 Cuba expert at Baruch College in New York. “These habits will die very hard, whether it’s Díaz-Canel or somebody else.”

In his departing remarks, Raúl Castro also announced the new leaders of the Politburo, the powerful group of Communist Party senior leaders, whose ranks will now include just one of the “historic generation” — Álvaro López, 77, who fought alongside Fidel Castro’s rebels and was recently named head of the armed forces. Also in the Politburo is Cuban General Luis Alberto Rodriguez López-Calleja, who manages a military conglomera­te of the island’s state-owned businesses.

López-Calleja is Castro’s former son-in-law, and the two are believed to remain close. The military and its entreprene­urial offshoot, known by its Spanish-language acronym GAESA, control as much as 80% of the Cuban economy, including vital sectors such as hotels and tourism, mining and state stores.

Cuba’s leaders are under increasing pressure to improve the lives of the island’s 11 million citizens. The nation’s economy contracted 11% in 2020, according to government figures, as the pandemic halted tourism and thenU.S. 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 new 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 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, healthcare practition­ers or architects.

Shortly before the Congress, Cuba announced it was loosening long-standing restrictio­ns on the sale of beef and dairy products, 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.

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 that he would vacate the presidency in 2018, handing over the presidency to Díaz-Canel, while retaining the more powerful role of party first secretary.

Though Díaz-Canel promised throughout the congress to uphold the core tenets of Cuba’s state-run, Soviet-style system, analysts say the island’s dismal economy will force him to make difficult decisions to enhance production, investment and efficiency.

“He is by necessity going to be focusing on what is unpleasant,” John Kavulich, the president of the U.S.-Cuba Trade and Economic Council, said of Díaz-Canel. “I believe he very well may be a oneterm president, not because he’s forced out, but because he will have completed those transition tasks.”

The new party leader also faces simmering social tension, as a nascent civil society demands greater freedoms and ordinary Cubans begin to express their frustratio­n online. Social media emerged as a recurring theme at the congress, with Díaz-Canel saying negative messages on the internet are part of an “extreme right” campaign to destroy the revolution. He likened communist enemies to “mercenary lumpen” — parroting a phrase often used by Fidel Castro to describe Cubans who left the island in opposition.

Though there is no longer a Castro in charge, there are also still other family members in influentia­l positions.

“The real power is not

Díaz-Canel. The real power is Raúl’s family and LopezCalle­ja,” said economist Emilio Morales, president of the Havana Consulting Group, a Miami-based firm that analyzes the Cuban economy.

Christophe­r Sabatini, an expert in Latin American affairs and senior fellow at the Chatham House think tank, noted that the transition comes at a crucial time, when critical voices such as artists belonging to an activist collective known as the San Isidro movement find a wider platform. But he doesn’t expect much from the decidedly uncharisma­tic Díaz-Canel.

“He’s a classic company man,” Sabatini said. “I don’t think he has the ideas and the political capital to implement anything dramatic.”

Many Cubans on the island are equally skeptical.

Manuel Almaguer, a 34-year-old who raises livestock in the eastern province of Holguín, said he was wistful that Raúl Castro left behind a country “resentful, impoverish­ed, and totally dependent on the state.” He believes key generals will have to leave for DíazCanel to have any sway.

“Díaz-Canel will continue to be a puppet of the centennial generation,” Almaguer said. “For DíazCanel to be seen, it will take at least five years. Time and natural law will take enemies out of the way.”

David Ovalle: 305-376-3379, @davidovall­e305

 ?? ARIEL LEY ROYERO Cuban state media via AP ?? Raúl Castro, right, raises the hand of Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel after Díaz-Canel was named first secretary of the Communist Party at the closing of the party's Congress in Havana on Monday.
ARIEL LEY ROYERO Cuban state media via AP Raúl Castro, right, raises the hand of Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel after Díaz-Canel was named first secretary of the Communist Party at the closing of the party's Congress in Havana on Monday.
 ?? ARIEL LEY ROYERO Cuban state media via AP ?? Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel said Monday the Cuban revolution ‘is alive and well in the midst of the gale that is shaking the world.’
ARIEL LEY ROYERO Cuban state media via AP Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel said Monday the Cuban revolution ‘is alive and well in the midst of the gale that is shaking the world.’

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