Opinion: Cuban election - high turnout despite opposition call for boycott

Dr Emily Morris
Dr Emily Morris
Dr Emily Morris Dr Emily Morris (UCL Institute of the Americas) analyses in The Conversation what the results of the recent election in Cuba means for the ruling Cuban Communist Party, and the country's prospects for democracy. Results of the five-yearly Cuban national assembly elections on March 26 will have disappointed opposition figures, who had called for a boycott to signal unhappiness with the government's performance. Two-thirds of the electorate submitted valid votes (that were not spoiled nor blank) despite opposition calls for people to stay away. Given all the difficulties and tensions of the past few years, the high numbers of voters seems to suggest that, although it is under strain, the Cuban political system is more resilient than expected. Turnout had been dropping since the days of former leader Fidel Castro, and poor voter numbers could have signalled significant dissatisfaction with the current president, Miguel Díaz-Canel Bermúdez. One of the reasons for the high turnout may be a sense of communal rejection of US threats to national sovereignty, the importance of which should not be ignored, according to historians such as Louis Pérez. Tightening of US sanctions has certainly contributed to everyday suffering and economic hardship.
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