[Marxism] Democrats differ on Cuba policy at Iowa debate
Eli Stephens
elishastephens at hotmail.com
Sun Dec 2 10:44:37 MST 2007
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20071202/pl_nm/usa_politics_democrats_dc&printer=1
By John Whitesides, Political Correspondent, Reuters
Sat Dec 1, 11:25 PM ET
Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama and other Democratic presidential candidates
disagreed on Saturday during a debate in Iowa on whether the United States
should immediately end a 4-decade-old embargo on Cuba.
At a "black and brown" debate focused on issues of interest to minority voters,
Connecticut Sen. Chris Dodd backed an immediate end to the U.S. embargo but
other candidates differed on how quickly it could be ended without changes in
the Caribbean island nation's government or human rights policies.
"I think we make a huge mistake by not normalizing relations with Cuba," Dodd
said, adding the embargo had benefited the communist government established in
1959 by Fidel Castro.
The polite debate, which featured few policy disagreements or confrontations,
came barely one month before Iowa kicks off the state-by-state battle to pick
the Democratic and Republican nominees for the November 2008 general election.
Clinton, the front-runner among Democrats in national polls, and rivals Obama,
John Edwards and Joseph Biden said relations could not be normalized without a
significant change in Cuba.
"I think that has to be a precondition," the New York senator said of an
improvement in Cuban human rights policies. She said there was "a tremendous
pent-up desire" for fundamental democratic reforms among the Cuban people.
Obama, an Illinois senator, said he would favor immediately loosening some
aspects of the embargo, including restrictions on visits to Cuba and remittances
to families. "Those two shifts in policy would send a signal that we can build
on," Obama said.
New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, who is Hispanic, said, "The embargo has not
worked" but that lifting it would require some immediate democratic reforms in Cuba.
President George W. Bush has rejected any easing of sanctions against Cuba
without a transition to democracy there, saying it would bolster the
government's grip on power. His administration has tightened the embargo,
including restrictions on visits to Cuba and remittances to families.
The 81-year-old Castro is recovering from a series of intestinal operations that
forced him to temporarily hand over power to his brother Raul in July 2006.
TIGHT THREE-WAY RACE
Clinton is locked in a tight three-way race in Iowa with Obama and Edwards, a
former North Carolina senator. All the candidates spent much of the day battling
an ice storm that disrupted several events and closed the Des Moines airport
until late afternoon.
Biden, a senator from Delaware, made it to only half of the debate after driving
from Chicago.
Clinton, delayed in arriving in Des Moines until late in the day, spoke to an
afternoon candidate forum by telephone and heard scattered boos from the crowd
of 5,000 during an exchange on immigration policy.
After stating her support for a path to citizenship for illegal immigrants,
Clinton made reference to the difficult process of getting a bill through Congress.
"You've got to get the Congress to pass the legislation. The president can do as
much as possible, which I will do," Clinton said as some in the crowd began to boo.
Clinton opened the evening debate with a brief reference to the hostage
situation at one of her campaign offices in New Hampshire on Friday, which ended
peacefully, and noted all her rivals had called to offer support and encouragement.
"We were very relieved at the way it turned out," she said.
(Additional reporting by Kay Henderson; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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