All Americans should be allowed travel to Cuba, says new poll


Recommended Posts

A new poll of Cuban Americans shows a strong majority favor allowing all Americans to travel to the island, a major shift from a 2002 survey that showed only a minority supporting the change, the Bendixen & Associates polling firm reported Tuesday.

Executive Vice President Fernand Amandi said he was surprised by the magnitude of the swing in just seven years -- from 46 percent in favor in 2002 to 59 percent in the Sept. 24-26 survey. Only 29 percent were opposed in the new survey, compared to 47 percent in 2002.

``The significant thing is how quickly they have moved in a short period of time,'' Amandi said, adding that the shift took place across all age groups, from older exiles to more recent arrivals.

A campaign to allow all Americans to travel to Cuba has become a key Washington battle ground this year for those who favor and oppose easing U.S. sanctions on the island. Permitting such travel would allow U.S. tourists to visit Cuba. Only Cuban Americans are now allowed virtually unrestricted travel to the island.

At least three bills lifting all restrictions on travel are now before Congress -- two in the House and one in the Senate. While most analysts believe the House may well approve some version of the measure, they say it will have little chance of gaining Senate approval because of opposition from Sen. Bob Menendez, a powerful Democrat.

Amandi noted that the results of the September poll should disarm the argument that the travel restrictions on Americans cannot be eased because of the political power of Cuban Americans who oppose it. ``This removes the final fig leaf for why the time has not come to change policy -- that Cuban Americans were opposed,'' he said.

Florida's Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, a Cuban American and ranking Republican on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, predicted the ban on American travel will not be lifted and had a different take on Cuban-American sentiments.

``The majority of Cuban Americans want the Cuban people to have free elections, guaranteed human rights and freedom for political prisoners. That is what constituents in South Florida want,'' she said in a statement to El Nuevo Herald.

Rep. William Delahunt, D-Mass., a key sponsor of one of the House bills, noted Cuba is the only country where American tourists cannot visit and said the new poll shows Cuban Americans support a more open approach to Havana, except for ``a dwindling clique locked into a Cold War mentality.''

The latest Bendixen survey, conducted on the phone, had a sample of 400 Cuban Americans across the United States and a margin of error of plus or minus 5 percentage points. The poll was not commissioned by anyone and Bendixen, which has done several other surveys on Cuba issues, conducted the poll on its own, said Amandi.

Bendixen reported the latest poll also showed that lifting the travel restrictions on Americans was supported by 48 percent of Cuban Americans who arrived in the United States before 1980 -- the so-called ``historic'' exiles. In 2002, that number was only 32 percent.

A ``generational gap'' remains, however, with the latest survey showing that 62 percent of Cuban Americans 18 to 64 years of age support lifting all travel restrictions, while 49 percent of those 65 or older favor the change, the company added.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

There go the great vacation package deals.

We just booked for late November at a beautiful resort halfway between Havana and Varadero.

Been there twice before, and loved the place.

Total cost, one week all-inclusive, C$889/person. (USD845).

That's unlimited food and drink.

There's also a great cigar shop, on site.

Last time I found a box of '97 Dip 4's, for US$95.

A nice mixture of guests. English and French Canadians, Brits, French, Italians, Russians, etc.

Much as I'd love to share this scene with all BOTLs,

am I looking forward to the US floodgate being opened? Not really...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

There go the great vacation package deals.

We just booked for late November at a beautiful resort halfway between Havana and Varadero.

Been there twice before, and loved the place.

Total cost, one week all-inclusive, C$889/person. (USD845).

That's unlimited food and drink.

There's also a great cigar shop, on site.

Last time I found a box of '97 Dip 4's, for US$95.

A nice mixture of guests. English and French Canadians, Brits, French, Italians, Russians, etc.

Much as I'd love to share this scene with all BOTLs,

am I looking forward to the US floodgate being opened? Not really...

:rotfl: Vacation? I want to move there! :wink2:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have the opportunity to go about once a year from the US (legally). Special permission from Treasury Dept. The last time I went was in July. I go to Santiago and not Havana. It was hot! I spent 10 days digging trenches for retaining walls and digging a well. All by hand (with a group of 13 others). No power tools (except for a pump) was available. The Cuban people are beautifully spirited (except for the drunk that punched me in the arm in the city park). The beaches are beautiful. I live with the locals and eat with them. Poverty is extreme. Each family can have 1 chicken, 1 quart of cooking oil, 1 bag of sugar per month. Beef is illegal except in the tourist hotels. Families can only have milk if there is a small child in the family. All of this is to say that if you go, it's hard to see the real Cuba as a tourist unless you get out in the country with the people. It is a beautiful yet sad place.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.

Community Software by Invision Power Services, Inc.