Cuba Policy
|
|
Wed Apr 01, 2009 at 10:30:00 AM EDT
|
While momentum grows for relaxing our Cuba policy including discussions over potentially lifting the travel ban, Senator Menendez remains in the middle of things:The son of Cuban immigrants, Menendez has risked the goodwill of the White House and his standing within the party to press the continuation of sanctions and travel restrictions against Havana's totalitarian regime. He riled many of his colleagues this month by blocking two of Obama's science nominees and by holding up the 2009 spending measure to protest the Cuba provisions it included.
The bill to be unveiled tomorrow in the Senate goes well beyond the measure Menendez just protested by removing legal barriers to all travel to Cuba, as opposed to just family-related visits. Reacting to the blowback over his strong stand on the issue, Menendez said this:"Anyone who knows me knows my views are both heartfelt and principled," Menendez responded. "It should be of no surprise to anyone that I have used political capital in my many years in the House and the Senate on this issue."
Senator Menendez said he would continue to use every available tool to preserve U.S. sanctions until political conditions change in Cuba, although he attributed much of his earlier ire to the fact that the provision had been inserted with no notice into an unrelated bill.
"If you want to change Cuba policy, fine, let's duke it out." "Let's duke it out on the floor and let's have our debate and let's have our amendments. Let's know who's for democracy and human rights and who wants to sell their stuff no matter how many people are in prison. That's fine. At least it will be an honest discussion." But then there is the campaign politics of the issue for Menendez too:Fellow Democrats were surprised by the force of his defiant, public opposition to a provision that enjoys broad support in the party. Menendez also serves as chairman of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, a coveted leadership post that demands a degree of party loyalty.
Some liberal donors protested doing business with a man they thought was taking an outdated stance, and some of Menendez's fellow senators questioned whether they had picked the wrong person for the DSCC job. Dodd, for instance, is a top GOP target in 2010. He has called U.S.-Cuba policy "an abject failure." Some Democrats have wondered privately how hard Menendez would work to defend his colleague. That will be a fine line for the Senator to walk. I don't think the Cuba policy has been effective and am not a fan of seeing things held up in order to maintain that. I understand he wants to use his political capital, but I'm sure people could come up with a few other suggestions. What do you think of the Senator's Cuba position and his use of political capital?
|
|
Discuss
:: (11
Comments)
|
|
|
|
|
Featured Stories  |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|