Newsweek: Cuban-American Support for Bush Eroding
PRNewswire
Monday, May 24, 2004
President George W. Bush may have to do without Republicans like Fernando
Amandi. A Miami Cuban-American and retired corporate executive who voted for
Bush in 2000, he has become disenchanted with the administration, particularly
with its handling of policy toward Cuba and Latin America. Bush "talked a good
game" against Fidel Castro, says Amandi, "but I didn't see much follow-
through."
Now Amandi is backing Sen. John Kerry, raising cash (more than
$100,000 so far as a vice chair of Kerry's national finance committee) and
offering advice on policy. Amandi says: "I've been impressed by [Kerry's] much
more substantial vision."
He's not alone. Bush's support among Cuban-Americans in south Florida --
about 80 percent of whom backed him in 2000 -- shows signs of eroding.
A March
Florida International University poll, for instance, showed that only 56
percent of the state's Cuban-Americans planned to vote for Bush, with 25
percent undecided. While the vast majority will almost certainly back Bush in
November, even a shift of 5 percent could tip the balance if Florida is a
close race.
Cuban-American grievances range from the administration's decision last
year to repatriate 12 immigrants intercepted at sea to its failure to support
dissidents on the island more vigorously. A few weeks ago President Bush
sought to staunch the bleeding by announcing a raft of anti-Castro policies
including additional funding for dissidents -- a package he touted on Cuban
Independence Day last Thursday. But some of those policies ignited another
firestorm: Cuban-Americans who regularly visit relatives on the island and
send them much-needed money now face new travel and remittance restrictions.
On Independence Day, hundreds crowded into the conference room of a Miami
hotel to denounce the measures. "This is dividing families," said Luis Miguel
Hernandez, who fears he won't be able to visit his terminally ill mother-in-
law. "I'm totally disappointed" with Bush, whom he voted for in 2000 but
likely won't back this year. A Bush campaign spokeswoman says, "No one has a
stronger record of fighting the Castro dictatorship than the president."
One
palliative for Bush: those most affected by the new policies are often
recently arrived and not yet eligible to vote.
But it's not yet certain whether Kerry can capitalize on the emerging
discontent. He's still struggling to achieve a clear Cuba policy. Last week,
says a Kerry adviser, the campaign was ready to air a radio ad in Miami that
bashed President Bush for meting out "more punishment and more pain" to Cuban
families with the new restrictions.
In tandem, Cuban-American Rep. Bob
Menendez, according to the adviser, planned to tout Kerry's credentials at a
press conference. But the campaign felt uncomfortable with some hard-line
language that Menendez wanted in the ad, and ultimately pulled the plug on the
radio buy and media event. (A Kerry spokesman disputes this portrayal;
Menendez did not return Newsweek's calls seeking comment.) For Kerry to
capture Cuban votes, he'll have to do better than that.
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