Why Trump wants to reverse the normalization of ties with Cuba
President Obama took steps toward normalization of US-Cuba relations, but Donald Trump gave Florida voters a different message.
President Obama took steps toward normalization of US-Cuba relations, but Donald Trump gave Florida voters a different message.
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump told supporters in Miami on Friday that if elected, he would reverse President Obama鈥檚 steps to normalize relations with Cuba unless the government there assented to US demands on political and religious freedoms.
鈥淭he president鈥檚 one-sided deal for Cuba benefits only the Castro regime,鈥 Mr. Trump told the crowd, according to the Guardian. 鈥淏ut all of the concessions that Barack Obama has granted the Castro regime were done with executive order, which means the next president can reverse them. And that is what I will do unless the Castro regime meets our demands. They include religious freedom for the Cuban people and the freeing of political prisoners.鈥
The candidate鈥檚 comments are closer in tone to the blistering prescriptions of former Republican-primary foe Marco Rubio 鈥 a Cuban-American senator from Florida who has served as the chamber鈥檚 voice of hard-line conservative advocacy on Cuba 鈥 than the more resigned-sounding stance of Trump鈥檚 earlier iterations.
Asked last September by the Daily Caller for his opinion on the normalization, Trump called it 鈥渇ine鈥, while adding that he believed 鈥渨e should have made a better deal.鈥 In March, he suggested that if steps toward normalization 鈥渨orked out,鈥 he might even open a hotel there, according to CNN.
The more severe tone seems to underscore the enduring importance of Cuban-American conservative voters in Florida, even as public opinion on normalization with Cuba has warmed. As Politico notes, Florida is a must-win swing state for Trump. He may be seeking to drum up support among Cuban-Americans, particularly in Miami-Dade County, where local Republican leaders have largely withheld their support for him, citing his rhetoric on immigration 鈥 and where he lost handily to Senator Rubio in the primaries, his only loss in the entire state. A majority of registered Republicans in Miami-Dade are Hispanic, many of them of Cuban descent.
Much of the Republican Party is still pro-embargo. But as public opinion in Florida begins to change, some members of the GOP have shown signs of openness to Cuba as well.
A poll conducted by Florida International University after President Obama鈥檚 March visit to Cuba found that 63 percent of Cuban-American respondents in Miami-Dade County, the community鈥檚 historic heart, opposed the embargo. Large majorities also supported increased economic and diplomatic engagement.
As 海角大神鈥檚 Howard Franchi wrote in January 2015 after the Obama administration announced new rules on travel and trade with the island, Republicans in the Senate 鈥渂oth condemned and praised鈥 the move.
On Friday, Trump also made gestures of solidarity with Miami鈥檚 Venezuelan community, one that often makes common cause with Cuban exiles.
鈥淢iami is full of hard-working Venezuelans,鈥 he said, according to the Guardian. 鈥淭he next president must stand with all people oppressed in our hemisphere.鈥