miércoles, 9 de septiembre de 2015

Donald Trump says it’s ‘fine’ for U.S. to pursue closer Cuba ties

Donald Trump says it's 'fine' for U.S. to pursue closer Cuba ties
BY PATRICIA MAZZEI
pmazzei@MiamiHerald.com

Visiting Cuban Americans in Miami a decade and a half ago, Donald Trump
declared Fidel Castro a "killer" and a "criminal" who shouldn't be
"rewarded."

Now he has come up in support, albeit a little tepid, of President
Barack Obama's push for closer ties between the U.S. and Cuba — a policy
Trump characterized as "fine."

In an interview published Monday, Trump briefly responded to a single
question on his thoughts on the thaw in U.S.-Cuba relations: "Do you
think that is a good policy, or do you oppose America's opening with
Cuba?" asked the Daily Caller, a conservative-leaning Washington, D.C.,
publication.

"I think it's fine," Trump said. "I think it's fine, but we should have
made a better deal. The concept of opening with Cuba —50 years is enough
— the concept of opening with Cuba is fine. I think we should have made
a stronger deal."

There was no follow-up question in the published interview. Trump's
campaign did not respond to a request from the Miami Herald for further
details.

The 2016 Republican presidential front-runner is only the second GOP
contender to endorse the Obama Cuba policy, after Kentucky Sen. Rand
Paul. Miami's two hometown candidates, former Gov. Jeb Bush and Sen.
Marco Rubio, have been among its loudest critics. So has Texas Sen. Ted
Cruz, who is Cuban-American as is Rubio.

For Trump, his latest comments are markedly different from ones he has
made in the past on how the U.S. should deal with the Castro regime.

In 1999, as he toyed with a presidential run as a Reform Party
candidate, Trump wrote an op-ed published by the Miami Herald lambasting
doing business with Cuba: "Yes, the embargo is costly. If I formed a
joint venture with European partners, I would make millions of dollars.
But I'd rather lose those millions than lose my self-respect."

The Cuban American National Foundation invited the real-estate tycoon to
tour the Bay of Pigs Veterans' Library and Museum in Little Havana five
months later. He boasted of rejecting the Cuba development deals and
expounded on Castro.

"He's been a killer, he's a criminal and I don't think you should reward
people who have done what he has done," Trump said.

At one point, the crowd cheered, "¡Viva Donald Trump!"

The Daily Caller didn't specifically ask Trump about the embargo. But
Trump has softened or outright reversed his mind on other issues, such
as abortion rights, which he backed and now opposes ("A woman has to
have the choice," Trump said in the same 1999 Miami swing). Those flips
have made him move closer to the Republican establishment. His
endorsement of the U.S.-Cuba rapprochement does the opposite, putting
the candidate closer to Democrat Hillary Clinton, the former U.S.
secretary of state who came to Florida International University in July
to trumpet Obama's policy. She said she would support lifting the embargo.

However, Trump appears to have little to lose. He's leading the field
because of an outsider message that resonates with voters frustrated
with politicians, not because of his adherence to GOP orthodoxy. Even in
Miami-Dade County, where 73 percent of Republican voters are Hispanic —
many of them of Cuban descent — there's little risk for Trump because a
majority of those voters are probably already siding with Rubio or Bush.

And separate from party honchos, Trump seems more in line with
Republican views, anyway. A Pew Research Center survey released in July
found that 56 percent of Republican respondents favored Obama's Cuba
policy, and 59 percent supported doing away with the embargo.

Source: Donald Trump says it's 'fine' for U.S. to pursue closer Cuba
ties | Miami Herald -
http://www.miamiherald.com/news/politics-government/elections-2016/article34401528.html

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