The Arizona Republic

Sanders wrong on Cuba, but not on Trump

- Elvia Díaz Reach Elvia Díaz at 602-444-8606 or elvia.diaz@arizonarep­ublic.com. Follow her on Twitter, @elviadiaz1.

Cuban-Americans are furious and some suggest they may ditch Bernie Sanders over his praising of “massive literacy” under Fidel Castro’s communist Cuba.

The wicked remarks unleashed a media frenzy forecastin­g big trouble for the Democratic frontrunne­r because Cuban-Americans are powerful in Florida. But by the time Florida holds its primary on March 17, Sanders may have firmly cemented his momentum toward the magic 1,991 delegates needed to seal the nomination.

That leaves an even more intriguing question. Would Cubans in Florida really pick Donald Trump over Sanders in November?

Let’s add a bit of perspectiv­e and compare the two men to answer that question.

Cubans aren’t likely to embrace Sanders because he’s a self-defined socialist, and they despise everything to do with Castro’s 1959 revolution that exiled them — or the parents of the new generation of Cubans in Florida — in the first place.

To them, it’s a deal-breaker that Sanders had the audacity to say it’s “unfair to simply say everything is bad” about Fidel Castro’s Cuba.

“When Fidel Castro came to office, you know what he did? He had a massive literacy program,” he told he told “60 Minutes” on Sunday. “Is that a bad thing? Even though Fidel Castro did it?”

Well, literacy itself is a good thing. But the late Fidel Castro became a brutal dictator who murdered or jailed political dissidents, stifled free speech and turned Cuba into a desolate, starving and decrepit island.

Fidel Castro is gone, but his brutal legacy is pretty much alive. U.S. economic sanctions that have choked the island for decades are tied to the powerful Cubans who settled in Florida.

Over time, many of the Cuban émigrés and their children became Republican­s and Fidel Castro’s sworn enemies, such as Florida Republican Sen. Marco Rubio, who lashed out at Sanders’ remarks.

“He’s wrong about why people didn’t overthrow Castro. It’s not because ‘he educated their kids, gave them health care’ it‘s because his opponents were jailed, murdered or exiled,” Rubio said on Twitter.

Still, is Sanders really worse than Trump? Trump calls North Korea’s dictator Kim Jong Un a friend. Yes, a friend of a ruthless tyrant who obliterate­s people and had his own brother murdered with a nerve agent in Sri Lanka.

Trump goes out of his way to praise Russian President Vladimir Putin and doesn’t give a damn that the tyrant is meddling in U.S. elections to destabiliz­e this nation.

In the same interview, Sanders brought up Trump’s friendship with authoritar­ians. “Unlike Donald Trump, I do not think Kim Jong Un is a good friend. I don’t trade love letters with a murderer and dictator.”

Fidel Castro and his brother Raúl ruined Cuba. And no massive literacy campaign can ever compensate for the economic catastroph­e and brutality of the dictatorsh­ip.

Cuba, which ranks among the less prosperous Latin American countries, would fit right in with Trump’s “s---hole countries.” Is he really better than Sanders?

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States