Editore"s Note
Tilting at Windmills

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April 23, 2009

AMERICANS SUPPORT CLOSER CUBAN TIES.... Just yesterday, the Politico had an item questioning how President Obama has managed to get away with "brush[ing] aside 50 years of anti-communist orthodoxy by relaxing restrictions against Fidel Castro's Cuba." It might have something to do with the fact that the public agrees with him.

As President Barack Obama weighs the future of U.S.-Cuba relations, Americans continue to express support for closer ties. Since 1999, a majority of Americans have consistently said they favor re-establishing U.S. diplomatic relations with Cuba -- including 60% in a new Gallup Poll conducted after Obama's decision last week to relax some restrictions.

A majority of poll respondents said the U.S. should end the trade embargo with Cuba, and an even larger majority support ending restrictions on travel to Cuba.

OK, but that's the national public opinion landscape. What about the opinion of Cuban Americans? There's evidence they support recent shifts in U.S. policy, too.

A majority of Cuban Americans support President Barack Obama and back his moves to improve relations with Cuba, according to a new poll that suggests the community's staunch support for a tough U.S. stance against the Castro government may be eroding.

The survey said 64 percent of respondents favor Obama's directive to lift all restrictions on remittances and visits by Cuban Americans to family in Cuba.... The telephone survey of 400 Cuban-American adults in Florida, New Jersey and other states was conducted in Spanish and English on April 15-16, days after Obama announced his administration would relax sanctions against Havana.

"Ten years ago, you wouldn't have seen anything near these numbers. Now it's the reality of where the community is," said Fernand Amandi, a pollster with Miami's Bendixen & Associates, a Democratic firm that did the survey. "It's unprecedented to suggest that the community for the first time is aligned with a Democratic president when it comes to Cuba policy."

U.S. leaders have been afraid to make some of these common-sense changes for quite some time. It's not unreasonable to argue that we had to wait for a younger Cuban-American generation to come of age before shifting the policy, but either way, it's encouraging to see Obama not only make the changes, but have these changes embraced by the public.

Steve Benen 2:45 PM Permalink | Trackbacks | Comments (8)
 
Comments

There's quite a bit of low-hanging fruit out there for smart politicians. GOP and villager conventional wisdom runs counter to good public policy and the approaches desired by most Americans. Obama realizes that the GOP and Washington are out of step with reality and the public. Its a wonderful situation.

Posted by: rk on April 23, 2009 at 2:53 PM | PERMALINK

Hmmm, how to end Communism? Remind me who said "Tear down this wall!" again ...

Posted by: royalblue_tom on April 23, 2009 at 3:01 PM | PERMALINK

U.S. leaders have been afraid

And that's the difference now.

Posted by: eadie on April 23, 2009 at 3:14 PM | PERMALINK

the change in policies towards Cuba is an urgent need and I praised Obama's ideas.But,are we aware that they aren't "conveniets" to Castro's plans and that he will surely manuver looking for caos?.How will react our gov.

Posted by: carlos on April 23, 2009 at 4:16 PM | PERMALINK

I agree with Carlos. It takes two to tango and nobody has yet asked Castro what kind of relationship with US he wants. Having grown up in a socialist country myself, I'd expect him to accept the remittances happily but visits less so, or only in restricted (tourist) areas.

Also, Obama's still mum on the issue of Cubans coming to visit here and I expect there'd be resistance to that at both ends; we'd be afraid they'd never go back and Castro would be afraid of the same thing. Yet, without the travel movement in both directions, the situation could hardly be called "normalised".

Posted by: exlibra on April 23, 2009 at 5:29 PM | PERMALINK

All Obama's done so far is to brush aside eight years of George Bush orthodoxy, since the sanctions are now what they were under Clinton. I hope to see action on just getting rid of the embargo. Yes, Cuba's a dictatorship, but so is Egypt and Saudi Arabia and we don't make it against the law for Americans to spend money in those places.

Posted by: Joe Buck on April 23, 2009 at 7:41 PM | PERMALINK

What a courageous risk of political capital--pandering to the majority of voters. What a leader. Profiles in courage material.

Posted by: Luther on April 24, 2009 at 2:15 AM | PERMALINK

The conservatives and many democrats lack the courage of thier convictions when it come to capitalism. You want to get rid of Castro? Openly trade with him. But we do not actually believe that capitalism is rhobust. We do not believe it spreads wealth and encourages individualism We beleive it needs to be protected in exactly the same way socialism needs to be protected.

American conservatives act in ways opposite to their stated beliefs. Their denial of the people of Cuba to join the system of trade in the americas is one more fine example.

Posted by: exclab on April 24, 2009 at 8:33 AM | PERMALINK




 

 
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