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Saturday, February 07, 2009

Cuba embargo popular, new poll indicates

Posted on Wednesday, 02.04.09
CUBA POLICY
Cuba embargo popular, new poll indicates
A new poll indicated Cuban Americans still support the trade embargo on
Cuba and restrictions that limit travel to the island. The findings
differed from a recent poll released by FIU.
BY ALFONSO CHARDY AND LUISA YANEZ
achardy@MiamiHerald.com

Calling its findings a clear message to President Barack Obama, a
Washington-based group will release a poll Wednesday showing that a
majority of Cuban-American registered voters in Florida support the
trade embargo on Cuba and restrictions limiting exile travel to the island.

Mauricio Claver-Carone, executive director of Cuba Democracy Public
Advocacy, which commissioned the poll, said the results mean the
president should be cautious about making radical changes in U.S. policy
toward Cuba.

''The Cuban-American community remains unified in its views, regardless
of party affiliation, in regards to Cuba policy,'' said Claver-Carone,
whose group lobbies the U.S. Congress to maintain the embargo.

U.S. law says the embargo can be lifted only when Havana complies with
at least three basic requirements: unconditional release of all
political prisoners, recognition of fundamental human rights and
legalization of political parties.

The new poll stands in contrast with one released in December by Florida
International University's Institute for Public Opinion Research.

The university poll, funded by the Brookings Institution and the Cuba
Study Group, showed that a majority of Cuban Americans in Miami-Dade
favor lifting the embargo and want to see diplomatic relations
reestablished.

Hugh Gladwin, director of the FIU group that conducted the poll, said
Tuesday his findings and those of the new poll are not that different.
''Polls are a snapshot of reality from different angles,'' he said.

The disparity in the poll conclusions may center on the way questions
were formulated and how the polls were conducted.

For example, the Cuba Democracy Public Advocacy poll -- conducted by
McLaughlin & Associates -- interviewed 500 registered Cuban-American
voters who were contacted by telephone.

YOUNGER AUDIENCE

The FIU poll questioned 800 voters and non-voters -- and in an attempt
to reach a younger audience, called 300 of the respondents on their
cellphones.

The Cuba Democracy poll found:

• 72 percent of those surveyed support continuation of the embargo.

• 58 percent favor continuation of exile travel restrictions imposed by
the Bush administration in 2004. Those restrictions limit exiles to one
trip to Cuba every three years instead of once a year as before.

The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.5 percentage points.

Exile travel to Cuba has become a source of friction in the
Cuban-American community in South Florida, where a generational gap is
widely perceived as being at the heart of divisions.

Younger exiles, or those who arrived in the last 20 years, appear to be
more willing to support easing restrictions, while exiles who arrived
decades ago often denounce such visits.

Results of the Cuba Democracy poll appear to corroborate that
conclusion: 42 percent of those surveyed, who were under age 55, support
the idea that Cubans who fled Cuba should be allowed to visit, while
only 30 percent of those over 55 favored the notion.

The question, as asked in the new poll, could be suggestive, Gladwin said.

The embargo question posed was: ``Do you support or oppose the current
U.S. policy of maintaining the trade and tourism embargo on the Cuban
regime until the Castro regime releases all political prisoners,
respects basic human rights and schedules free elections?''

Said Gladwin: ``I'm not Cuban, but if asked that question, I would
answer no, because to answer yes is to imply you oppose democracy in Cuba.''

TRAVEL QUESTION

Here was the question on travel to Cuba: ``Do you believe that Cubans
who leave Cuba in order to seek freedom in the U.S. should be allowed to
travel to Cuba while the regime they fled from is still in power?''

Claver-Carone said the question was phrased to explain the implications
of exile trips. During the campaign, Obama committed to allowing Cuban
Americans to travel Cuba as often as they like to see relatives.

http://www.miamiherald.com/news/miami-dade/story/886822.html

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