Cuba’s
National Assembly hashed through and approved the draft of a new constitution
last weekend, its discussion guided by Homero Acosta, a sort of Publius-without-the-pseudonym
who chaired the group that researched and studied constitutional issues and
produced the draft. His day job is executive secretary to the Council of State.
Acosta’s
title-by-title discussion of the draft is summarized briefly
in Granma and can be seen in two long videos here and here.
The
draft has not yet been published, and there are, according to Acosta, more than
50 new “norms” that will have to be legislated to accompany it once it is
approved.
Starting
with the presidency, what’s clear is that with the Castro era ended, the Cuban
leadership has decided that it wants no one older than 60 assuming that office,
it wants no one in it for more than two five-year terms, and it wants executive
functions distributed between a president and newly created prime minister.
These
conditions would have ended Fidel Castro’s presidency in 1986 and prevented
Raul’s altogether.
Beyond
that, not much is clear. Why was it decided in the first place that a prime
minister is needed? Will the president’s power be limited, or will the prime
minister be sort of a minister of the presidency who handles day-to-day
functions such as overseeing executive agencies? Will the prime minister be subordinate
to the president? Perhaps the full text will answer these questions when it is
published. Perhaps they will be answered once a prime minister is in office. Or
perhaps we will be guessing for years, because this is a political system where
very little is known about high-level decisionmaking, and there’s no evidence
that this is likely to change.
In the meantime,
note that the incumbent president is second-in-command of the Communist Party
and the prime minister is not; the president nominates the prime minister; the
president can propose legislation and the prime minister cannot; the president
has the power to promote and remove high-ranking military officers and the
prime minister does not; the president has exclusive pardon power; and changes
in the composition of the cabinet are initiated when the prime minister
proposes changes to the president. In addition, there are unspecified powers
that rested with the Council of State that now go to the president. None of
this fits the thesis that the new structure is intended to clip the president’s
wings.
A more
interesting question is not addressed: whether the legislature will actually legislate. Virtually all the economic
reform laws of the past decade have been decree-laws and ministerial
resolutions. The new constitution retains the Council of State’s power to legislate
during the 50 weeks each year when the legislature is not in session; according
to Acosta these decree-laws will be submitted to the legislature for
ratification. This is important in light of the heavy legislative to-do list,
which includes new laws for cooperatives and enterprises, an electoral law,
changes to the penal code, and much more.
Regarding
the economy, Acosta explained, the constitution will make a number of changes
to reflect the ways the country has changed after a decade of economic reforms.
Private property is recognized “because it exists,” he said. Trabajo por cuenta propia
(self-employment) is a “euphemism,” he said, because about 100,000 persons in
this category are employed by others.
He made
an interesting point about property. Whereas mixed property today takes only
one form, ventures between the state and a foreign partner, mixed property
combinations will be possible in the future between all forms of property. That
opens the door to the possibility of public-private partnerships.
Acosta
also engaged in a somewhat confusing discussion in the second video linked
above. He said the government’s objective is to limit concentration of
property, not wealth. He cited examples of athletes, artists, or farmers who
may earn high income, and his point seemed to be that high earners are going to
be inherent in Cuba’s economic model, and their income should be taxed, but the
government’s focus should be on preventing concentration of property. We’ll see
how that translates into legislation. It may explain the prohibition soon to
take effect on entrepreneurs having licenses for more than one business.
Acosta
also explained with some enthusiasm the need for more foreign investment.
In the
area of civil rights, it is clear that legislation is coming to permit same-sex
marriages. One of Acosta’s slides explained that freedom of assembly,
association, and demonstration are to be guaranteed “with lawful and peaceful
purposes, always exercised with respect for public order and the law.” And
under the concept of “effective citizenship,” Cuban citizens are to be treated
as such in their national territory, regardless of any other citizenship they
may have acquired. “Effective citizenship” may be a new term, but it is not
clear that it makes any legal difference. It is already the case that if you
were born in Cuba, you are treated as a Cuban under Cuban law.
The
proposed constitution will be published and submitted to public debate for 90
days, concluding November 15, after which it will be subject to approval by
popular referendum. If it is the same process as the one followed for the Lineamientos reform proposal in 2011, it
means there will be discussions in workplaces, neighborhoods, party meetings,
etc., followed by a yes-or-no vote in the referendum. Among the many issues –
the changes in government structure, the opening to private property and laws
to consolidate private enterprises and cooperatives, same-sex marriage – which
will matter most to Cubans when they vote?
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