Cuban-American legislators threaten to withdraw support for President Bush
Associated Press
MIAMI -- A group of Florida Republican state representatives is warning
President Bush that he could lose their support for the 2004 election if
he fails to adopt a
tougher Cuba policy.
The Cuban-American leaders drafted a letter to be mailed Monday asking
the administration to revise its current migration policy, indict Fidel
Castro for the 1996
shoot down of two planes by Cuban fighter jets, ensure that TV Marti
is viewed by people in Cuba and increase aid to dissidents on the island.
``We feel it is our responsibility as Republican elected officials to
inform you that unless substantial progress on the above-mentioned issues
occurs rapidly, we fear
the historic and intense support from Cuban American voters for Republican
federal candidates, including yourself, will be jeopardized,'' reads the
letter, signed by
13 members of the state's Republican Hispanic Caucus.
Many prominent members of the Cuban American community have criticized
the Bush administration's decision last month to return 12 Cubans suspected
of
hijacking a boat to reach Florida. Six of the men were freed upon their
return to Cuba, one of the repatriated men said last week.
The United States agreed to return the suspects after receiving assurances
from Castro's government that the Cubans would not be executed and would
be
sentenced to no more than 10 years in prison. Bush's brother, Florida
Gov. Jeb Bush, took issue with the decision, citing concerns about a recent
crackdown on
dissidents and the executions of three men who tried to hijack a ferry
to South Florida.
State Rep. David Rivera, R-Miami, who helped draft the letter, called
the discontent among Cuban-American voters as a ``growing crisis'' for
Republican leaders at
the federal level. He said the lawmakers could refuse financial and
tactical support for Bush next year if he failed to meet the demands.
``If this is ignored, abstention or neutrality in federal races becomes
a real possibility,'' Rivera said in an interview. ``It's not an option
for us to support Democrats,
but we want our support to mean something.''
Jimmy Orr, a White House spokesman, said the president strongly supports bringing democratic change to Cuba.
``The administration is firmly dedicated to a pro-active Cuba policy
that will assist the Cuban people in their struggle for freedom,'' Orr
said. ``The president remains
committed to the use of the embargo and travel restrictions to encourage
a rapid transition.''
Otto Reich, President Bush's special envoy for the Western Hemisphere,
said Friday in a Miami speech that the Bush administration was working
to bolster TV and
Radio Marti. He said the administration would announce ``very soon''
a new way of penetrating the ``information wall'' that Castro has set up
around Cuba.
Reich also underlined the administration's efforts to help dissidents
on the island, citing the thousands of magazine subscriptions and short
wave radios that have been
disseminated in Cuba.
Under the U.S. wet-foot-dry-foot immigration policy, most Cubans intercepted
at sea are sent back while those who reach U.S. soil are allowed to stay.
On ``wet
foot, dry foot,'' Reich said the administration had to hold the current
line to avoid another mass migration.
Besides Rivera, the letter was signed by Miami-area state Reps. Juan-Carlos
Planas, Marco Rubio, Ralph Arza, Gus Barreiro, Gaston Cantens, Rene Garcia,
Marcelo Llorente, Manny Prieguez, Julio Robaina, and Juan Zapata. The
letter was also signed by Ken Sorensen of Key Largo and John Quinones of
Kissimmee.
The letter also puts Gov. Bush in an awkward position because the members
of the Republican Hispanic Caucus are among his most loyal political allies.
The
governor's spokeswoman, Jill Bratina, said he ``believes the president
has a strong record when it comes to Cuba policy.''
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