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Electoral Process Continues Smoothly Nationwide (Election season kickoff in Cuba)

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Mika Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-10-10 10:05 PM
Original message
Electoral Process Continues Smoothly Nationwide (Election season kickoff in Cuba)
Edited on Wed Mar-10-10 10:05 PM by Mika
Electoral Process Continues Smoothly Nationwide
http://www.ain.cubaweb.cu/idioma/ingles/2010/0310asambleascelebradas.htm

GUANTANAMO, Cuba, March 10 (acn) The President of the National Electoral
Commission, Ana Maria Mari Machado, participated on Tuesday with voters
of District 27 in this eastern city in their meeting to nominate candidates to
the local government.


District 27 is made up of voters from three Committees for the Defense of the Revolution who directly elected a woman as their candidate for the nationwide partial elections scheduled for April 25th and May 1st.

Mari Machado, accompanied by local electoral authorities and leaders of grass-root organizations, exchanged ideas with the neighbors and congratulated the newly-elected candidate.

Speaking to ACN, she highlighted the values of Cuban democracy in which voters elect their representatives based on their merits and abilities. She also praised the participation of people in the process, particularly in Guantanamo, which shows a 94% participation of voters in meetings to elect candidates for delegates to the Municipal Assemblies.

More than 1,700 meetings to select candidates to the Municipal Assemblies have taken place in Guatanamo province.









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bemildred Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-10-10 11:45 PM
Response to Original message
1. Voting is not mandatory?
Just wondering.
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Mika Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-11-10 08:25 AM
Response to Reply #1
3. No, it is not.
Eligible voter turnout is usually in the low ninety percentile.


:hi:











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protocol rv Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-11-10 06:41 AM
Response to Original message
2. They should Dissolve the Communist Party
And then I'll believe they have some kind of democracy. :-)
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Peace Patriot Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-11-10 11:21 AM
Response to Reply #2
4. I don't think that a Chevron apologist who makes racist comments about 'Indians'
has anything to teach us about "democracy" or even believes in it.

Racist comment #36, here...

http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=405x30994

'Protocol rv''s denial of the "rainforest Chernobly" in Ecuador--the Chevron-Texaco toxic oil spill the size of Rhode Island, which has destroyed fisheries, rivers and streams and the living of 30,000 Indigenous people in the Amazon forest--and 'protocol rv''s racist remark, that the charges against Chevron should be disregarded because they were "presented by an Indian," taints all 'Protocol rv' comments on Latin American issues. In fact, 'protocol rv''s views are so like the crap put out by Chevron's 12 P.R. firms--which they hired to discredit the Indigenous who filed suit against them for damages and cleanup--that they have no credibility whatsoever, and come under my Rule No. 1 from the Bush Junta as a guide to determining the truth: To wit, whatever 'Protocol rv' asserts, the opposite is the truth.

Thus, we can surmise that democracy would not exist in Cuba but for the Communist Party and Fidel Castro's role as a sort of benevolent monarch--a revered and unifying figure, who, with a Communist Party elite devoted not to their own traitorous greed--as with our elite--but to the common welfare, have defended the Cuban revolution against the malicious and aggressive menace to the north, the USA and the Miami mafia, all this time--for 50 years now. It is interesting to note, too, that neither the Communist Party nor any political party in Cuba is allowed to run candidates in elections. Candidates must run as individuals, entirely on their own merits, with no money involved whatsoever--no Rahm Emmanuel or Karl Rove doling out multi-millions of dollars from corporations, war profiteers and the super-rich, to the preferred shits who get to run for office. We can be sure, too, that Cuba does not have a private, far rightwing corporation, like ES&S--which just bought out Diebold and now has an 85% monopoly of U.S. voting systems--controlling the voting system results with 'TRADE SECRET' code and virtually no audit/recount controls.

Who has the better democracy--Cuba or the USA? I'd say the one with universal free medical care, universal free education as far as your merits can take you--through college, through a medical degree or whatever you are able to achieve--the one where both prosperity and hardship are shared by everyone, where no one goes homeless or hungry, where there are no multi-billionaires dictating wars in their own interest, and bleeding the government to enrich themselves and committing heinous crimes like slaughtering a hundred thousand people in Iraq to steal their oil and torturing thousands of prisoners.

All of this can be surmised by reversing 'protocol rv''s statements--as is efficacious with any Bushwhack--to point us to the truth. But it is also supported by the FACTS. In this instance, the Communist Party has protected real democracy and also--with similarities to Vietnam--it has protected Cuba's sovereignty, i.e., it has prevented Cuba from being swallowed up as U.S. client state, and subjected to dictates from Washington's and Miami's rancid rulers. And THIS is why virtually every country in Latin America has recognized the Cuban government, in defiance of U.S. dictates--because the Cuban people in truth have more sovereignty--more independence, more freedom and better lives, living as they do in a decent society in which everyone is cared for--than any country in Latin America, and certainly than here. There is a REASON why Cuban communism has survived, while Soviet communism did not, and while Chinese communism has become a weird hybrid of capitalist greed and Communist Party dictation: because Cuba is where communist ideas worked, possibly because Cuba is small, possibly because Cuban culture is inherently "New World" (inherently democratic) and most certainly because the Cuban Communist Party is different--never aspired to empire, never invaded or oppressed Cuba's neighbors and created a truly equitable society, with the best medical system and literacy/education systems in the western hemisphere.

'Protocol rv''s says: "They should Dissolve the Communist Party. And then I'll believe they have some kind of democracy." This is the opposite of the truth. If 'they' had "dissolved the Communist Party," democracy would not exist in Cuba. Cubans would now be strangled by Miami mob bosses, and cruelly oppressed by U.S.-imposed dictators, as is the case in U.S. client states Colombia, Honduras, Haiti and increasingly Peru. And 'protocol rv' will never "believe" that "they have some kind of democracy" until--Heaven forbid--the rich and the criminal are back in charge in Cuba. What 'protocol rv' means by democracy is fake democracy, of the kind, say, that Chevron-Texaco would approve of, whereby they can pollute a great swath of the Amazon rainforest with impunity and where an 'Indian''s word is questioned because he is an 'Indian'--a "democracy" in name only.
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protocol rv Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-11-10 11:32 AM
Response to Reply #4
5. Personal attacks are so unbecoming
It only hurts those who carry out the attack. Why not discuss the issues instead?
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Peace Patriot Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-11-10 10:23 PM
Response to Reply #5
10. I addressed both the issues and your rightwing, racist views. The latter is
very definitely useful is addressing the former, for my rule of thumb for people with views like yours--that whatever you say, the opposite is true--pointed me toward the truth about the Communist Party in Cuba. If you don't like it, then it must have great value--and I discovered that value as I wrote my reply.

Latin American countries in which the rightwing elites have sold out their country and their people to U.S. corporate/war profiteer interests no longer have anything like real democracy--equitable societies, majority rule, clean elections and positive goals such as social justice. The worst one, Colombia, is run by narco-thugs, the military and their death squads who have killed thousands of union leaders, human rights workers, peasant farmer leaders and others for opposing the government, and have displaced 4 million peasant farmers with reigns of terror in their regions. Honduras is now heading in the same direction. Haiti has long been a ravaged U.S. client state. The countries most dominated by the U.S. are the poorest and the least democratic countries in Latin America.

And most other countries rank high on good leadership. social justice, democracy and other positives in direct proportion to their resistance to U.S. domination--with, say, Mexico on the poor end (not yet Colombia or Honduras), and Venezuela, Bolivia and Ecuador on the high end (almost as resistant to U.S. domination as Cuba is). But those latter three had to go through decades of exploitation/interference by the U.S. to finally and firmly reject U.S. rule.

The Communist Party in Cuba has been the most resistance force in Latin America against the horrors of U.S. dictation, for 50 years, and has thus preserved Cuba from the worst that the U.S. can do to Latin American societies. It has made democracy possible in Cuba, whereas under Batista and any of his would-be successors in Miami, and with almost every U.S. administration from Reagan onward--if they had succeeded in their plots against Cuba--conditions would be simply terrible and Colombia-like in Cuba.

That is what corporations like Chevron-Texaco want in Latin America--countries where the poor have no rights, and where corrupt governments let corporations do anything they want, including destroying a portion of the Amazon rainforest the size of Rhode Island (in Ecuador). Your personal viewpoint, as a Chevron-Texaco apologist and propagandist, and as a DUer who has made a racist comment about "Indians," is most certainly relevant to your viewpoint on the Communist Party in Cuba. To ignore what you have previously said would be stupid, and for those who don't know what you have previously said, they might think that your wish to be rid of the Communist Party in Cuba is an objective view. It is not.

But, as I said, it is useful in thinking about the Communist Party in Cuba and what it has managed to do for the Cuban people, despite 50 years of nefarious U.S./Miami plotting, lies and punishment. Cuba has survived as an equitable society with many excellent social programs that we should all be studying to try to improve our own ravaged country, because of the Communist Party in Cuba and its strong stance against the U.S.

Do keep on commenting, "protocol rv," so we can learn more of the truth by reversing whatever you have to say and going from there.
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-12-10 03:49 PM
Response to Reply #10
11. The old US-connected ruling class in Cuba moved to Miami and took over the town,
quickly earning the town, through vicious, violent war upon political or social enemies the title given Miami during that time as "America's Terror Capital" by the F.B.I.

They continued to reinforce that perception through successive decades with more violence, and horrendous political corruption, not to mention the same lack of values like seething racial hatred, police violence, and a sense of entitlement they cultivated in Cuba before the people finally were able to throw their asses out of power.

I've often wondered why the people of Miami didn't throw them (the original wave of exiles who set up power there) out, but what DID happen was that many people who used to live in Miami moved away, instead, in great numbers, and quickly, leaving a town behind which even named a day of the year for, and a street for a mass-murdering, life-long terrorist and in-flight airliner bomber, an ally of Reagan'a and George W. Bush'a State Department appointee, Orlando Bosch, a man (???) who was charged by the U.S. Congress for running an illegal propaganda program during the Contra war against Nicaraguan citizens.

Your post is so appropriate, absolutely fitting. Thank you.
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EFerrari Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-12-10 04:12 PM
Response to Reply #5
14. Confronting racism is not unbecoming. n/t
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naaman fletcher Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Mar-13-10 11:35 PM
Response to Reply #14
22. What is the racist comment? That he called "indigenous people" "indians"? nt
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Mika Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-11-10 04:13 PM
Response to Reply #4
6. Great post!
Edited on Thu Mar-11-10 04:25 PM by Mika
:thumbsup: :thumbsup:












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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-12-10 03:52 PM
Response to Reply #6
12. Mika, your graph created by the BBC based on World Bank info. is tremendous. Thanks. n/t
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naaman fletcher Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Mar-13-10 11:34 PM
Response to Reply #4
21. What is the racist comment? That he called "indigenous people" "indians"? nt
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Mika Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-11-10 04:34 PM
Response to Original message
7. Cuban Elections: An Exercise in Democracy
Cuban Elections: An Exercise in Democracy
http://www.periodico26.cu/english/news_tunas/jan2010/democracy-elections022410.html

Las Tunas, Cuba, Feb 24 (P-26).- For Ana María Labrada, Masielis Barea, Yilian Leyva and Bárbara Céspedes, librarianship students at the Ramiro Guerra Technical College in Puerto Padre, it is clear that elections in Cuba are an exercise in democracy to which all citizens have a right.

“Here, everybody can elect or be elected to represent people in their neighborhood, municipality, province and even the nation assembly,” said one of them, “And nobody lloks at the color of your skin, sex or age.” “Economic or social status is not important for people to be chosen and elected,” argued another one. “And they don’t spend tons of money in electoral propaganda so they can get elected.”

“We youngsters also have the right to be elected,” explains Yilian, noting that “age does not stand in the way of you getting to represent the people.” “What is important—says Masielis—is that you be a responsible person of proven loyalty.












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Mika Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-11-10 04:47 PM
Response to Original message
8. Cubans vote for political leaders and neighborhood representatives
Cubans vote for political leaders and neighborhood representatives
http://havanajournal.com/politics/entry/cubans-vote-for-political-leaders-and-neighborhood-representatives/



Residents of the Nuevo Vedado neighboorhood attend a meeting during municipal
elections in Havana, Sept. 11, 2007. Cuba’s communist system is built in part on
these block-by-block gatherings, where anyone 16 and over can nominate neighbors
and vote on candidates for local government. (AP Photo/Prensa Latina)



Voting isn’t mandatory, and younger Cubans aren’t much in evidence at the nominating assemblies, even though participation is strongly encouraged and organizers even take attendance slips.

On O’Reilly Street, families spill out of crowded apartments for the vote. Struggling to be heard over the music, a veteran organizer shouts to the crowd that the assembly will soon begin.

“Raise your hand to vote, but do not raise your hand more than once,” she warns. Soon a microphone is produced, the music silenced and four candidates nominated.

“We all know him as a good neighbor who completes his work,” one woman says in support of the first nominee, party member Buenaventura Fernandez.

“We could leave behind the ‘machismo’ that we’ve always had and nominate a ‘companera,‘“ a man implores, praising the lone female nominee.

But the final vote isn’t close. Fernandez’s name is called first. Without a word, 63 hands go up. The other three get just 39 votes between them.

Everyone applauds. “Viva Fidel! Viva Raul!” they cry, before drifting home. The whole process has taken 27 minutes.

Fernandez is middle-aged and a first-time nominee, but “he was already known by people,” says Jorge Guerrero, a 59-year-old port mechanic and voter, explaining the landslide victory.

Asked if he hopes one day to vote like this for Cuba’s president, Rene Grana, a 77-year-old retiree, replies that Fernandez could win an assembly seat and work his way up from there.

“Maybe we just elected the president of the republic,” he says.











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Mika Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-11-10 05:00 PM
Response to Original message
9. Pics
Edited on Thu Mar-11-10 05:04 PM by Mika

Candidate posters



A man leaves a voting cabinet at a polling station
during Cuba's municipal elections in Havana



Two young Pioneers stand next to a ballot box at a polling
station during Cuba's municipal elections in Havana



A woman casts her ballot at a polling station during
Cuba's municipal elections in Havana



Local residents line up early Sunday before casting
their vote at a polling station during Cuba's municipal
elections in Havana







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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-12-10 04:03 PM
Response to Reply #9
13. My god. I've heard so much about the voting season but of course our media doesn't show
photos, does it? Of course not!

What a priviledge to see images of an event ordinary US citizens are not able to see for themselves. That makes it so much easier for cynical right-wing life-long lying propagandists to pass off whoppers as the truth!

Of course their laughable crappola is always undone by US citizens who do travel in Cuba, as well as citizens from the rest of the world share their experiences with us.

Thank you for these wonderful photos. I've heard even the children are involved, 'though this is the first time I've been able to see images of it. Beautiful.
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Mika Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-12-10 08:05 PM
Response to Reply #13
18. Members of the Young Pioneers take shifts guarding the ballot box and helping out on election days.
And the ballots are counted and tabulated in public.


Cuba Opens Election Year 2008
http://circlesonline.blogspot.com/2008/01/cuba-opens-election-year-2008.html

A novel feature of Cuban elections is the presence of 5th to 9th graders at polling stations. Besides getting acquainted with this important civic responsibility and guarding the ballot boxes, they also assist voters with disabilities.

On Election Day the polls will open on Sunday from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m., however anyone still in line at the scheduled time of closure is allowed to cast their ballot. The manual vote count is done in public immediately following the closing of the polls.











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Mika Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-12-10 07:33 PM
Response to Original message
15. CUBANS NOMINATE CANDIDATES FOR LOCAL GOVERNMENT ELECTIONS

CUBANS NOMINATE CANDIDATES FOR LOCAL GOVERNMENT ELECTIONS
http://news.brunei.fm/2010/03/09/cubans-nominate-candidates-for-local-government-elections/

Cuban voters have so far held over 21,800 assemblies to nominate candidates to the People’s Power Municipal Assemblies (local governments), authorities confirmed.

The elections will be held on April 25, and on May 2 where there will be a second round in the constituencies if none of those nominated wins over 50 percent of valid votes.

Over 8.40 million Cubans, including about 400,000 new voters have been called to cast their ballots.

Attendance to the assemblies -over 17,000 candidates have been nominated- exceeds 85 percent, National Election Commission (CEN) secretary Alina Balseiro said.

Those chosen comprise over 6,000 women, 3,400 youth and about 5,600 delegates recognised for their work in the current nomination process.

The greatest number of assemblies will be held this week for a process that started on Feb 24 and to conclude within 16 days.












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Bacchus39 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-12-10 07:43 PM
Response to Original message
16. I wonder how the Communist party will fare in this year's election
should be a horse race
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Mika Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-12-10 07:55 PM
Response to Reply #16
17. As you well know....
Edited on Fri Mar-12-10 07:57 PM by Mika
http://www.poptel.org.uk/cuba-solidarity/democracy.htm
This system in Cuba is based upon universal adult suffrage for all those aged 16 and over. Nobody is excluded from voting, except convicted criminals or those who have left the country. Voter turnouts have usually been in the region of 95% of those eligible .

There are direct elections to municipal, provincial and national assemblies, the latter represent Cuba's parliament.

Electoral candidates are not chosen by small committees of political parties. No political party, including the Communist Party, is permitted to nominate or campaign for any given candidates.



Last time I asked, the (card carrying) Communists were about 17% of the National Assembly. FYI, the (candidates who are members of) numerous union parties make up the bulk of the assemblies.









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bemildred Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-12-10 08:05 PM
Response to Reply #17
19. My God! It's like they are governing themselves.
No wonder it spooks Western observers.
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protocol rv Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-14-10 07:36 AM
Response to Reply #16
23. Rolling on the floor laughing outloud
I'm sure the communist party members annointed by the ruling communist oligarchs will duly win their posts, and proceed to become trained seals for their masters. It's a caricature, a front, something Potemikin, Goebbels, and the American vicerroys in iraq would be proud of.
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Mika Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-14-10 10:23 AM
Response to Reply #23
24. What Peace Patriot says. +1
Invert your perverse fantasies about Cuba, and one is much closer to the truth.










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protocol rv Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-26-10 06:19 PM
Response to Reply #24
26. I talk to Cubans in the flesh
I also read what Human Rights Watch has to say about Cuba.
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Mika Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-26-10 07:02 PM
Response to Reply #26
27. You mean: you read what Cubanet has to say about Cuba
When it comes to Cuba reports HRW = Cubanet.



http://havanajournal.com/politics/entry/cubanetorg_and_cubacenterorg_get_millions_from_usaid_to_subvert_cuba_regime/">Cubanet.org and CubaCenter.org get millions from USAID to subvert Cuba regime

But the decision to prohibit cash payments to the Cuban opposition does not apply to the NED, which describes itself as a private, non-profit group but is funded largely by the U.S. Congress. The NED was founded in 1983 to provide support for promoting democracy overseas.

Since 2000, the NED has allocated about $4.9 million to its Cuba program, financing about a dozen groups annually.

One recipient is the Madrid-based journal Encuentro de la Cultura Cubana, which publishes the work of Cuban writers on cultural and political issues.

Another major recipient is the Cuban Democratic Directorate, an anti-Castro group based in Hialeah, Fla., that charts dissident activities and human rights violations on the island.

Sabatini said about 20 percent of the NED’s assistance to Cuba reaches the island in cash, primarily to support the work, training and travel of activists.

The NED’s Cuba budget is scheduled to double in the next fiscal year to about $2 million.

Two of the primary Cuba-related groups handling the NED’s cash payments are CubaNet ( http://www.cubanet.org>http://www.cubanet.org ), a Florida-based Web site that publishes the work of freelancers, and the Center for a Free Cuba ( http://www.cubacenter.org>http://www.cubacenter.org ), a Washington group led by anti-Castro activist Frank Calzon.

The two groups also receive USAID funding. Calzon’s organization has taken in more than $5 million in recent years and CubaNet more than $1.3 million, according to USAID figures.

Rosa Berre, director of CubaNet, said the agency sends about $3,000 a month in NED funds to Cuba to pay freelance writers and activists for articles.

“It’s valid to work for money. This is what people do,” Berre said. Nine of her freelancers in Cuba were imprisoned in the 2003 crackdown, and two others revealed themselves as spies for Cuban intelligence in testimony against those arrested.











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Mika Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Mar-13-10 10:28 PM
Response to Original message
20. Alarcon on Cuba, Democracy, & the 2010 Elections
Alarcon on Cuba, Democracy, & the 2010 Elections
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL1003/S00087.htm
by Julie Webb-Pullman


In 2008 Cuba suffered three devastating hurricanes within a matter of weeks, followed hot on the heels by the world economic meltdown.

Last week I asked Ricardo Alarcon, President of the Cuban National Assembly of Peoples’ Power, how the country and the people are holding up, and what particular features help them weather these natural, and unnatural, disasters.

Alarcon replied: “The only way you can do it is to work, to try harder, to face the natural and unnatural constraints or damage that
we may face. I would say that believe it or not the answer to that is democracy, socialism, more socialism, that means more democracy. It means people engagement, people’s commitment to work together to confront the challenges that nature provokes.

A hurricane is a perfect example. We have organised a civil defence system based on the participation of everybody, but the most striking things you see during a hurricane are the examples of human solidarity.

Some commentators abroad refer to the efficiency of Cuba as “Cuba’s evacuation programme” when a hurricane comes. Yes, but they fail to say that most of the evacuees are either self-evacuated or are evacuated to a friend’s home, to somebody else’s place who offers. People are accustomed to face this every year. When the hurricane season starts, people will move, and will get the support of others.

Well, it is the same with the economy, it is the same at the political level, it is the same at the electoral process, getting together,
participating as equals and developing human solidarity, that is the essential of democracy, that is to say, the essential of socialism.”

2010 Elections
Which took me nicely to my next question - the Cuban people are about to go to the polls in the first national municipal elections since Fidel Castro stepped down due to ill-health. I asked him, “Do you expect any surprises?”

“Many surprises! Why? Election day will be April 25 and the following Sunday will be the run-off, if no candidate has an absolute majority of 50% plus 1. But that is at the end of the process, the process began yesterday through the neighbourhood meetings in which the electors, the people themselves, individually nominate anybody they want to, as their candidate for that election. There will be, phew, more than 50,000 such meetings as those begun yesterday, in which anybody can nominate anybody and they will decide who will be their candidate. Our system is not based on electoral parties, it is not an electoral machinery which presents candidates. It is the people themselves, directly,” he explained.

“The Municipal Assemblies are made up of delegates elected at the various precincts that constitute that municipality. Every municipality has a number of precincts depending on its population and size, and every precinct is divided into nominating areas. In heavily populated areas like Havana, this might be one block, but in the country it will be a larger surrounding area.

Now we are at the first stage. Every nominating area will have meetings where the people propose this neighbour or another, whoever they like. The various candidates so elected throughout the precinct will go to the ballot of 25th April.

According to the law there have to be at least two, and up to eight, candidates, that’s the limit. In order to be elected you have to get 50% plus one of the vote. If there are 2 candidates it is easier, but when you have more than 2 candidates, as happens on many occasions, you will need a run-off between those receiving the most votes.

So as a matter of fact, rather than ‘an election’, we have an electoral process throughout which there are dozens, thousands of
elections on a smaller scale, and then at the larger scale.

And then the results at the end – I said that there will be surprises because I don’t have the slightest idea of who is proposing whom, or will propose whom tomorrow, or the day after – in other countries its easier, you know it will be the political machinery, political parties who will decide who is their candidate. In our case, it is impossible, it’s simply impossible to know because you have 8 million 4 hundred thousand electors with the capacity to nominate.

Voter Registration
I said it seemed a complicated process, involving a lot of preparation and commitment...

Alarcon responded: “First of all it is very easy. You don’t have to pay, you don’t have to do anything to become a registered elector, to have the right to vote. In Cuba registration to vote is automatic. You have a right to vote when you reach 16 years of age, it is a birth given right - like health care, like education, there is also the right to vote when you reach 16 years of age.

I would say that it is, rather, a very simple process but of course that implies a lot of participation, a lot of volunteer work. It
involves tens of thousands of people that are volunteering, practically everybody.

For example, part of it is the publication of the electoral lists. At every neighbourhood, and you can see that around here in Havana at the drug store, at the market, they put a list of names called the Basic List. It is public in order that people can see and check if they are there or not, because maybe there is a mistake and they are not, and people also move, people die, people grow older and a person who was a child at the last election is 16 now or will be 16 by election day. It is an opportunity for the public to check and to correct that list, and also to control that list.

I know, and every Cuban citizen knows, how many and who can vote in my electoral college and I know that if there are say 300, more or less an average number for an electoral college, I can see them, and I can say no, no this guy moved, he is now living in Matanzas, he shouldn’t be here, or, that person unfortunately passed away last year, okay they can correct that. I also know that the total is 300, so nobody can get more than 300 votes in that place.

The foundation of fraud in an election is the secrecy of the list, and you can control that possibility by publicising the list, this is a
process that is also going on now. On the one hand the candidates are being nominated by the people, and on the other hand everybody being able to know where you can vote.

Election Campaign
The so-called campaign here is very simple also – the bios - photos and biographies - of the various candidates will be put around in public places - the drugstore, the market, the bus-stop – you will see people going “Ah, that’s the friend of so-and-so, that’s the cousin of....” because they know the person directly because it is one of their neighbours, or they know that someone else in their precinct knows them directly because that is why they proposed them.”

To ensure fairness, each candidate is allowed only one A4-size page, and there is no radio or television campaigning, billboards, or any of the other costly campaigning methods to be found in other countries. This ensures everyone has an equal chance, and that candidates with more financial resources cannot get an unfair advantage.

Voting Day
Alarcon continued: “Voting itself is very very simple also, because we have thousands of volunteers. Also, it is on a Sunday, from first thing in the morning until the night, and the run-off is the next Sunday, and if there has to be another (and it has happened, two
people got exactly the same), then the next Sunday.

Talking about the concentrated population areas, big cities like Havana for example, you have probably thousands of polling places. In the country of course it is different, you have to travel a little, you have to walk, or ride, or take a horse or whatever, to the nearest place, like a rural school.

In Havana, an area with a highly concentrated population, you walk perhaps to the next corner from your house, where 200 more people are supposed to vote, and in my personal experience it doesn’t take more than 2 or 3 minutes. You go there and you show your ID card and somebody will check the list of people registered to vote in that place, and they will make a notation, they will give you a ballot, you will go inside a private place, you mark the ballot in the way you want, and then you come out and put it in the box, and then at the end of the day that box is opened.

The voting is secret, nobody knows what you do in that private place, but the counting of the ballot has to be public and the result has to be published there. There is no possibility of fraud, no possibility whatsoever. Everybody knows how many and who can vote. Everybody knows that the vote was secret. And everybody can witness the actual result of that ballot, can participate in the counting.

I remember on one occasion a foreign journalist came looking for me at my precinct on voting day because they knew where we live and where we vote, and they wanted a statement. I went to one of the voting places in my precinct, and a friend told me, “There were some journalists looking for you.” I went home and later spoke with one of them, and he said, “I tried to find you but I couldn’t, but anyway, congratulations,” and he gave me the results of that polling booth. “Hey, how do you know?” I asked. He replied, “I was there just watching, and looking for you, and someone said, would you like to come in, please, because it’s open.” He said he even helped them with the counting!

Costs
In order to do all that you need a lot of people volunteering, because it is not a big machine like in other countries. It’s not so costly
really, the main costs are the printing of the ballots and the communications for the dissemination of the results, these imply some
costs like computers and telephones etc - but no salaries.

Turnout
About what there will be no surprise, is that there will be a huge turnout. Some people make jokes about that abroad. It’s always about 90%. But it is no surprise to me because everybody is practically involved in one way or another in the preparations and the process, and when you know the candidate - or if you don’t know them personally you know someone else who knows them personally - and you have confidence in the process of how that person came to appear on the ballot, that makes a huge difference compared to the anonymity of other places. It’s so abstract to have a party nominating.

In our case, I think that is the foundation of the very big turnout. There is a more direct connection between the candidates and the
electors that makes them feel more connected with the process, and so they show up on election day.

I would suggest to you that you take this opportunity of being here at this time to witness this process,” he finished.

You’re on, Señor Alarcon! I’m off to my local precinct to find out when the nomination meeting is being held. Stay tuned!












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Mika Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-26-10 06:13 PM
Response to Original message
25.  Nomination Process: Yes for Cuba

Nomination Process: Yes for Cuba
http://www.ain.cubaweb.cu/idioma/ingles/2010/0326procesonominacion.htm

As a reflection of the people’s support of the Cuban democratic model, organization, discipline and high attendance to the nomination meetings were the highlights of the candidate selection process for the election of delegates to the Municipal Assemblies of the People’s Power in the western province of Pinar del Rio.

by Elena Milian Salaberri

In the context of a fierce media campaign against Cuba promoted by the United States and its allies, the people of the Caribbean island concluded more than 50,000 meetings to select candidates with the requirements for the post according to their neighbors. Of those assemblies, 2,798 were held in this westernmost province of Cuba.

About the total number of candidates to the partial elections slated for next April 25, the Electoral Commission of Pinar del Rio reported that 910 of them are women (32.5 percent) and 589 are people under 35 years of age (21.05 percent), which reflects how these two sectors have stepped up in their roles in the exercise of government.

Another remarkable outcome was the nomination of 875 delegates holding office, that is, men and women in which residents of their communities have once again put all their trust in a clear evidence of their satisfaction with their work.

Regarding the subject, several voters told ACN that it is a way to recognize the efforts, dedication and qualities of these representatives in their management even when their achievements in the active term did not meet the growing expectations of the people.

The current electoral process began last February 24 with the recently concluded nomination assemblies, that are followed by the publication of biographies and pictures of the candidates as well as the electoral roll in each area prior to April 25 elections.

Around 1,287 delegates should be elected this year in the province for the same number of districts and to constitute 14 new municipal assemblies of the People’s Power.

Nation-wise, the nomination process for the upcoming elections was marked by a high turnout, which denies the statement released by the European Parliament calling for support to a pacific transition towards “democracy” in Cuba.

The nomination process, undoubtedly successful, resulted in the selection of the best and more capable candidates without impositions by electoral parties or any other manipulating machinery, as stated by Ricardo Alarcon, President of the Cuban Parliament.









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Mika Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Apr-18-10 09:12 AM
Response to Original message
28. Characteristics of Cuban Electoral System
Characteristics of Cuban Electoral System
http://www.periodico26.cu/english/opinion/march10/cuba-elections041710.html

In the declaration and action plan adopted at the World Conference on Human Rights which took place in Vienna in 1993 it was also established that: “democracy is based on the freely expressed will of the people to determine their own political, economic, social and cultural systems and their full participation in all aspects of their lives”.

The Cuban political system is genuinely authentic and autochthonous and is based on the experiences handed down by its rich history of struggle for equality and solidarity between men and women, independence, sovereignty, non-discrimination, unity, participation, people’s power and social justice.

This reality does not preclude, however, questioning the Cuban political and electoral system. Washington, in their campaign to discredit, wants to prove its incompatibility with internationally accepted standards on democracy and human rights; as well as build an image of an intolerant society that does not allow the least diversity and political plurality.

Those who criticize our electoral system refer to the need of having a multi-party system since they consider free elections impossible with only one party. The Cuban Communist Party (PCC) is not an electoral party; it does not decide on the formation or composition of the Government.

It is not only forbidden to nominate candidates but also to be involved in any stage of the electoral process. It does not take part in nor interfere in the elections for the National Assembly of People’s Power.

All Cuban residents have the right to vote if they are aged 16 and match the requirements established in the Electoral Law (Law 72, 1992).

The elections are completely clean and transparent. The ballot boxes are guarded by children and young pioneers, they are sealed in the presence of the voters, the votes are counted publicly, and anyone interested in doing so may participate including the domestic and foreign press, diplomats, tourists and anyone else who wants to.

Anyone elected must receive a majority of the votes cast. The candidate is only elected if he or she obtains more than 50% of the valid votes cast. In the case of delegates to the municipal assemblies, if this does not happen in the first round, then the two candidates who received most votes move on to a second round. If a candidate is not elected as delegate to the provincial assemblies or deputy to the National Assembly, then a new candidate must be nominated for a second round of elections.

Cuban voting is free, direct and secret, so each person can do as follows: vote in favor, against or refrain from voting.

All those elected have to render account to their voters of what they have done. The deputies and delegates are not professionals and therefore are not paid a salary for performing their duties.

Another element that validates the uniquely democratic nature of Cuba's electoral process is the active and conscious participation in elections. In all proceedings initiated since 1976, has involved more than 95 percent of the voters.

These are just some features of the electoral process which shows the essence of Cuban democracy and the system it has established, endorsed and supported by the vast majority of Cubans, in a truly democratic exercise.








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Mika Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Apr-20-10 06:28 PM
Response to Original message
29. Cuba’s Elections and the Filter
Cuba’s Elections and the Filter
http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=23079

Next Sunday, Cuba will hold local or elections. This means delegates will be elected by residents to Municipal Assemblies of Popular Power . These delegates will also go on to participate in bodies that administer the areas that the municipalities are divided into, which are known as Popular Councils.

Once constituted, each Municipal Assembly and Popular Council will designate its own president and officers.

These are partial elections because representatives are only selected at the Municipal Assembly and Popular Council levels (made up, as mentioned, basically by the same people).

There are also general elections in which the members of Provincial Assemblies and the National Assembly (parliament) are elected, in addition to local delegates. However these broader elections occur every five years. This is the how the Cuban electoral-political cycle operates.

The municipal elections in Cuba are well known on the island for the fact that citizens themselves nominate the candidates, whose names will appear on the electoral ballots. Later the voters go to the polls and each one selects the “best and most capable” candidate according to their “virtue and merit.”

-

Thus the difference is that in the municipal elections, citizens are proposed by their fellow citizens, though the electors cannot vote for all of them; while in the provincial and national elections, candidates are selected by organizations and there is a single list.

Experience demonstrates, however, that inclusion on this single list constitutes a sufficient guarantee that those on it will be elected, since most constituents vote for all of those candidates. This is why many academics and researchers say Cuba’s municipal elections involve greater “direct democracy,” while the other ones are less so.

I wanted to take this time to highlight some particulars concerning municipal elections. As we know, the final vote is secret: there are sealed ballot boxes and private voting booths. There can be from two to eight candidates, and a run-off election is held if none of them obtains the absolute majority. In this way the process conforms to the well-known democratic model, though with the particularity being that candidates are nominated in citizens’ assemblies that are organized in each neighborhood (one for each “nomination area”).

In addition, political parties do not make the nominations (officially there’s only one party, which —officially— doesn’t participate in the nomination process, though of course there are Party members who participate, and nothing prevents them from reaching a consensus on their candidates, although in the end the citizens decide while gathered in assemblies…).

What the Cuban Electoral Law (approved in 1992) mandated was that there must be at least two candidates per district. This is why if only one candidate is nominated, another nomination assembly will be held to propose an additional one(s). Therefore from two to eight candidates will emerge from those areas and go on the ballot. There will never be only one, as occurred in the former Soviet Union for example.

Now then: how is someone is nominated? The voters, under the direction of the Electoral Commission, meet in the specified place of the neighborhood where people can propose candidates. What happens later?

What occurs later is that if there is only one candidate identified and everyone is in agreement (through a show of hands) then he/she is considered approved as a candidate (with the exception being that if this is the last scheduled nomination assembly in the voting district and no other candidate has been identified, then another assembly will be held to propose another candidate; there must be at least two candidates).








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protocol rv Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Apr-20-10 09:04 PM
Response to Reply #29
30. Read Cuba's Constitution
After you read Cuba's Constitution, you'll see these elections Mika is touting are a sham.
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Apr-20-10 09:17 PM
Response to Reply #30
31. He's one of multiple DU'ers who have been in Cuba during the election season.
I trust all of THEM. They absolutely have only good things to say, and have found the experience interesting, and more living than the ones in their own home countries.

Don't wear yourself out trying to destroy Mika's image in our eyes. You won't win this task. Fuggedaboudit.
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Mika Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-22-10 11:30 AM
Response to Reply #30
32. Normally, I would challenge you to provide some proof of unsubstantiated wild claim.
But, seeing as how you either have some reading/comprehension issues or you are here simply to spam the threads, I won't bother to debate the Cuban constitution with you.

You know nothing about Cuba. Period.










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Billy Burnett Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-22-10 06:33 PM
Response to Reply #30
36. What are you talking about?
I've read a lot of your posts and I think that you're a contrarian, no matter what.

Anyway... please explain your position.

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naaman fletcher Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-22-10 01:31 PM
Response to Original message
33. what does this mean?
<i>District 27 is made up of voters from three Committees for the Defense of the Revolution who directly elected a woman as their candidate for the nationwide partial elections scheduled for April 25th and May 1st.</i>
<p>
Do you have to be a member of a committee for the defense of the revolution in order to vote?
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Mika Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-22-10 01:48 PM
Response to Reply #33
34. Its a badly translated paragraph.
It means that District 27 encompasses three neighborhoods, each with its own CDR office, and that citizens of Dist.27 directly elected a woman as their candidate.

This has been posted many times, perhaps you missed it in the past......

http://www.poptel.org.uk/cuba-solidarity/democracy.htm
This system in Cuba is based upon universal adult suffrage for all those aged 16 and over. Nobody is excluded from voting, except convicted criminals or those who have left the country. Voter turnouts have usually been in the region of 95% of those eligible .

There are direct elections to municipal, provincial and national assemblies, the latter represent Cuba's parliament.

Electoral candidates are not chosen by small committees of political parties. No political party, including the Communist Party, is permitted to nominate or campaign for any given candidates.








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naaman fletcher Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-22-10 07:13 PM
Response to Reply #34
37. thanks. nt.
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flamingdem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-22-10 03:01 PM
Response to Original message
35. Los Van Van to Play Outdoor Concert Saturday on the Malecon Supporting Elections

Los Van Van to Play Outdoor Concert Saturday on the Malecon

Juan Formell and his orchestra Los Van Van are playing a free outdoor
concert Saturday evening at the Anti-imperialist Square on Havana's
Malecon in salute to Sunday's nationwide municipal elections.

Juventud Rebelde

digital@juventudreb elde.cu

Juan Formell and his orchestra Los Van Van are playing a free outdoor
concert Saturday evening at the Anti-imperialist Square on Havana's
Malecon in salute to Sunday's nationwide municipal elections.

During the concert entitled, Soy Cuba, soy Van Van, the most
popular orchestra in the history of Cuban dance music will play some of
its most popular songs and numbers from its most recent album.

The concert is dedicated to the nationwide elections of representatives to the Municipal Assemblies that takes place on Sunday.

The legendary Van Van was founded in 1969 and has amazingly stayed atop of the hit parade for 40 years.
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Mika Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-23-10 10:24 PM
Response to Original message
38. Website about Cuban Elections Available Online
Website about Cuban Elections Available Online
http://www.cubanews.ain.cu/2010/0423website_elecciones.htm

HAVANA, Cuba, April 23 (acn) A website about elections in Cuba is available online as of Thursday at http://www.eleccionesencuba.cu

The website will provide up to the minute information about the two election rounds in Cuba scheduled for April 25 and May 2.

It contains a selection of interesting documents such as the Cuban Constitution, the structure of national and provincial electoral commissions and photos taken during the electoral process that can be downloaded.

The website will also feature articles related to the history of election processes in Cuba before and after the triumph of the Revolution in 1959.

A selection of articles published by the local media during the election process will be posted on the site.



http://www.eleccionesencuba.cu







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Mika Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-23-10 10:27 PM
Response to Original message
39. Cuba: Countdown to Elections
Cuba: Countdown to Elections
http://www.escambray.cu/Eng/Special/cubanelections100423757
Cuban voters and authorities are shaping final details for
a successful holding of elections on Sunday, April 25.

On that day, at least 8.40 million electors are expected to cast their vote to choose 15,093 delegates to the Municipal People's Power Assemblies (local governments).

In those electoral districts where no candidate gets more than 50 per cent of valid votes, a second round will be held on May 2.

According to official figures, 34,766 candidates have been nominated for their capacities and merits in assemblies attended by 86.84 percent of electors.

Maximum age of most candidates is 50 years, 87.3 percent are high school or university graduates, and 9,190 of them are delegates already, a post for which they get no income.

After a dynamic test or rehearsal four days ago, president of the National Electoral Committee Ana Maria Mari asserted that Cuba is ready.

We verified coordination of work with different entities, regarding communication and notification systems and liaisons, she said.







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