Demokrati i Cuba
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Opdateret den 02 september, 2000


DEMOCRACY IN CUBA

REAL Democracy in Cuba

Hermed følger Dan Christensens artikel om demokrati i Cuba

 

Democracy – REAL democracy – is alive and well in Cuba. Forget the US State Department’s propaganda . . . Since the electoral reforms of the early 90’s – the culmination of more than 100 years of struggle – Cuba has become perhaps the most democratic society in the world. And unlike the rich man’s "dollar democracy" that we have come to know, it unifies the people and gives full expression to their collective will. Following is a description of the institutional means by which this is achieved – the Cuban electoral process.

My remarks here are based largely on the recent book, "Democracy in Cuba and the 1997-98 Elections." The author, Arnold August (Canada, 1944), is the first non-Cuban who has directly attended virtually all the steps of the contemporary Cuban electoral process. His book is based on many months of painstaking research, personal observation and interviews in Cuba.

The Municipalities

The Cuban electoral process is a two-step process. The first step is the election of delegates to the municipal assemblies. Municipalities are not to be confused with cities or towns. Havana, a city of two million people, for example, is composed of 15 municipalities. Plazas de la Revolution is one of these municipalities. It is subdivided into 104 constituencies. One of these, Constituency Number 12, is the basis for an in-depth case study in August’s book. One can walk around this particular constituency in about 15 minutes. It has a population of about 1,800. One municipal delegate represents this population.

August also chose another constituency, Constituency Number 43, in the rural municipality of Abreus in the province of Cienfuegos as the basis of another case study. One of nine constituencies in Abreus, it is based on the town Horquitas. This constituency is composed in the main of four farm cooperatives and has a population of about 5,000. It is represented by no less than nine delegates to the municipal assembly.

The Nomination and Election of Municipal Delegates

For the purposes of nominating candidates to the municipal assemblies, constituencies are divided into nomination areas. Constituency Number 12 in Plaza de la Revolution, for example, was divided into seven nomination areas. There, they correspond roughly to one side of a street in a city block. Most nomination meetings take place on the street or in local meeting halls. Anyone can attend, Cubans and foreigners alike. At the meeting, any registered voter in that constituency can nominate anyone else residing in there. Those nominating a candidate usually give a brief explanation of the reason for their choice. Anyone present may speak for or against a nominee. At the close of nominations, registered voters in attendance vote by a show of hands. The nominee with the most votes will be a candidate for the local municipal assembly. In any given constituency, there will typically be between two and eight candidates for one or more seats on the municipal assembly. Municipal elections are very low key affairs. Standardized posters with photographs and a brief biography of each candidate are simply posted in public places. Money simply does not enter the picture. It costs nothing to be elected to the municipal assembly or to any other political office in Cuba for that matter. Delegates are elected by secret ballot.

The Nomination of Candidates
to the Provincial and National Assemblies

Candidates for the provincial and national assemblies are nominated by the municipal assemblies who, as we have seen, are themselves nominated and elected by the people in a fair and open process at the "grassroots" neighbourhood level. This, I believe, is key to the resiliency and strength of Cuban democracy.

Unlike the delegates to municipal assembly, delegates nominated to the provincial and national assemblies need not reside in the municipality in which they are nominated. To get the best candidates, the municipal assemblies consult with local and national plenums of various mass organizations who conduct a nation-wide talent search. The municipal assembly may reject their recommendations in whole or in part. For the most part, however, they are accepted. Typically, about half the candidates are already delegates to the municipal assembly.

The Provincial and National Elections and the United Vote

Also, unlike the municipal elections, there is only one candidate nominated for each seat. Each voter will get a chance to vote for several candidates for both levels of government and is encouraged to vote for ALL of them— the so-called "united vote." He or she may vote for none, some or all of them on a secret ballot. He or she may also secretly turn in a spoiled or blank ballot to register some kind of protest. These ballots too are recorded in the official results. Each candidate is required to get at least 50 percent of the vote to be elected.

Since the candidates may not be known to the voters in an area, opportunities to meet them and discuss concerns on any issue are organized by the local electoral commissions. August describes several such meetings. Typically, these occur at the voter’s places of work. As in the municipal elections, posters with a photograph and a brief biography of each candidate are posted in public places. There is no "electioneering" as we know it. Missing are the mudslinging, hate mongering, "promises" and lies.

The Results of the 1998 Elections

Voter turnout for the Provincial and National election was 98.35 %.

94.45% of those casting an eligible vote did so for ALL candidates – the so-called united vote.

3.36% of ballots were blank and 1.66% were spoiled.

In 1998, the National Assembly was comprised of 601 delegates. Here is a breakdown of their various backgrounds (some delegates are counted more than once as they hold positions in addition to their full-time jobs):

145 workers, peasants, cooperative workers, educators, health service employees and others directly linked to production and services

26 scientists

7 sports men and women

30 journalists, writers, artists and other cultural workers

35 from the Armed Forces or Ministry of Interior

64 leaders and functionaries of the Communist Party of Cuba or Communist Youth

56 leaders of mass organizations

41 leaders and functionaries of the state apparatus

173 leaders of local government

90 leaders of the consejos populares

21 administrators or functionaries in the national government

3 religious pastors

Their average age was 45.

28 percent were women.

46 percent of them were originally nominated in the municipal nomination area assemblies.

Rendering of Accounts and the Right of Recall

Delegates traditionally meet at six-month intervals with their constituents in small neighbourhood meetings to give an account of themselves, hear complains, solve problems and discuss various initiatives. August describes several such meetings which he attended. Topics ranged from the cost of meals on the lunch wagon at job sights to the administration of healthcare. As happens from time to time, if constituents are unsatisfied with their delegate they can recall him or her and hold another election.

The Election of the Council of State and The President

The National Assembly meets twice a year over its five-year term. Once it is established, it nominates and elects by secret ballot the 31 member Council of State including the President (Fidel Castro). The Council of State represents the National Assembly when it is not in session and is accountable for its actions to the National Assembly.

Conclusion

Cuba is a REAL democracy. Far from hampering democracy, the lack of an adversarial, multiparty system based of money was key to building a REAL people’s democracy. As we have seen, the basis of power rests not with any political party or elite group, but at the "grassroots" neighbourhood level. Is it any wonder the US government will stop at nothing in its attempt to crush the Cuban Revolution?

Dan Christensen

Cuba SI

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