WASHINGTON: US President George W. Bush has lost significant support in
Florida's Cuban-American community which, if the 2000 elections are a
guide, could play a decisive role in November's voting, according to a
poll released here on Friday.
The survey of 812 Cuban-Americans in several key south Florida counties
shows Bush still claiming the backing of two-thirds of the community.
While unusually strong for any ethnic voting bloc, that support is down
from the nearly 82 per cent of the Florida Cuban-American vote he
received in 2000.
The survey, commissioned by the William C Velasquez Institute and
conducted by MirRam Global, and carried out June 29-July 7, suggests
Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry could make serious inroads
into the community, particularly by directing his appeal to
Cuban-Americans who arrived in the United States after 1980 and those
who were born in the country.
Those two groups are the most disaffected with Bush, according to
MirRam Director Luis Miranda, who noted to journalists however that, so
far, "that discontent does not translate into support for the
Democratic candidate".
The survey found that only 16 per cent of adult Cuban- Americans
currently consider themselves likely to vote for the Democratic
candidate. A major reason for the erosion in support for Bush,
especially among Cuban-Americans who arrived after 1980, is the
unpopularity of recent regulations that have cut back the freedom of
Cuban- Americans to visit their homeland and to send money and other
supplies to their relatives there, the survey found.
Those regulations, which were initially announced in May but took
formal effect in late June, have provoked a major controversy within
the Cuban-American community, pitting older, more established
right-wing members against new arrivals, whose links to the island
remain much stronger.
"These new, harsh policies only divide Cuban families and senselessly
punish those in need of humanitarian aid", said Mavis Anderson, senior
associate of the Latin American Working Group (LAWG), a
Washington-based coalition of church and human rights groups that
oppose the 44-year-old US trade embargo against the island nation.
Nearly two-thirds of the survey's respondents who arrived in the United
States after 1980 and 59 per cent of US-born Cuban- Americans, for
example, expressed "strong disapproval" of one new regulation that
limits travel to Cuba to only once every three years, instead of the
current once a year. By contrast, only 38 per cent of Cuban-Americans
who arrived prior to 1980 said they disagreed with the policy.
"The restrictions are dividing the Cuban-American community
politically, and contributing to an erosion in support for the
president", said Geoff Thale, a Cuba specialist at the Washington
Office on Latin America (WOLA).
Release of the poll results followed by just one day a sharp rebuff by
the Republican-led House of Representatives to Bush's Cuba policy,
particularly his latest measures to make it harder for Cuban-Americans
and other citizens to send gifts and other items to the island.
A total of 46 lawmakers from Bush's Republican party crossed the aisle
to join Democrats in refusing to appropriate money for the enforcement
of regulations that limit the amount of baggage Cuban-Americans can
carry on planes to Cuba and that ban certain items, such as toiletries
and clothing, which could be sent to Cubans as gifts.
The desertion of a substantial number of farm-state and moderate
Republicans, who teamed up with Democrats several years ago to exempt
agricultural exports from the trade embargo and are eager to broaden
that exemption, recalled votes late last year in which bipartisan
majorities of both the House and the Senate voted to lift restrictions
on travel to Cuba. Those efforts, however, eventually fell victim to a
threat by Bush to veto the moves.
In addition to the limitations on frequency of family visits, the new
regulations also require that Cuban-Americans define "family" much more
narrowly than in the past, and make it more difficult for other US
nationals to travel to the island for educational or cultural reasons.
They also sharply reduce the amount of money that can be spent by
Cuban-Americans in Cuba, and prohibit sending remittances to anyone in
the Caribbean nation except close family members.
The measures were imposed largely as a result of political pressure
exerted by more hard-line, anti-Castro elements in the Cuban-American
community, who expressed bitter disappointment that Bush had not been
more aggressive in his policies toward the island in the first three
years of his tenure.
They reacted particularly strongly in the wake of a major crackdown
last year by President Fidel Castro against dissidents that resulted in
lengthy prison sentences. The Cuban-American hard-liners were led by
two South Florida congressmen, Representatives Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and
Lincoln Diaz-Balart.
But even as the new rules were announced in May, a number of
more-moderate groups, such as the Cuban American National Foundation
(CANF), suggested the administration was going too far and would pay a
political price for heeding the extremists. Several groups also formed
the Cuban American Commission for Family Rights, which is now fighting
the new regulations.
Florida, which went to Bush by a mere 500-vote margin in 2000, ended up
deciding the entire presidential election and is currently considered a
"battleground state" - that is, one of about 10 states where the
Bush-Kerry race is considered too close to call. Any substantial shift
in votes by an important community could decide the outcome in
November.
While Cuban-American voters often split their votes between the two
major parties in local or state elections, they tend to vote
overwhelmingly Republican in presidential races, by margins that have
fluctuated between 75 and 85 per cent, making them perhaps the most
solidly Republican ethnic bloc in the country.
According to the survey, many Cuban-Americans, particularly those who
were born in the United States, who arrived in the country after 1980,
or who came for economic reasons, expressed unhappiness with Bush for
the same reasons as other citizens - mainly the economy and Iraq.
-Dawn/The Inter Press News Service.