domingo, 18 de mayo de 2014
Obama quiere a Julián Castro en su equipo
| STAN HONDA via Getty Images
WASHINGTON (AP) — El presidente Barack Obama está considerando designar al alcalde de San Antonio, Julián Castro, un astro en ascenso dentro del Partido Demócrata, como jefe del Departamento de Vivienda y Desarrollo Urbano (HUD por sus iniciales en inglés), según personas con conocimiento del proceso de selección.
Designar a Castro, de 39 años, para el cargo en el gabinete incrementaría la presencia nacional del alcalde en su tercer período en el cargo, quien ha sido mencionado como probable candidato a la vicepresidencia del país en 2016, particularmente si Hillary Rodham Clinton se postula.
Si Castro es nominado y luego confirmado por el Senado, se convertiría en uno de los funcionarios hispanos de mayor rango en el gobierno de Obama.
El prestigio de Castro en los círculos demócratas ha estado creciendo desde que fue el orador principal en la Convención Nacional Demócrata de 2012. Él y su hermano gemelo, el legislador Joaquín Castro, han sido muy buscados como oradores en el circuito de recaudadores de fondos.
Castro reemplazaría a Shaun Donovan, un miembro del gabinete original de Obama que es popular en la Casa Blanca. No está claro si Donovan permanecerá en el gobierno.
Un asistente de Joaquín Castro dijo que Julián Castro ha manifestado interés en el empleo en vivienda y que ciertamente planea tomar el cargo si se le ofrece. El asistente mencionó el trabajo del alcalde en la "Promise Zone" de San Antonio como parte de lo que lo califica para el cargo.
El HUD tiene un papel principal en la supervisión de la iniciativa "Promise Zone", la cual tiene como objetivo revitalizar comunidades pobres incrementando la actividad económica, mejorando oportunidades de educación y utilizando capital privado. San Antonio estuvo entre las primeras ciudades que recibieron una subvención del gobierno para el programa.
El asistente pidió no ser identificado ya que no está autorizado para hablar del asunto antes de un anuncio oficial por parte de la casa Blanca. Otros con conocimiento del proceso de selección también insistieron en ser mantenidos en el anonimato porque no están autorizados a discutir el asunto proporcionando su nombre.
La Casa Blanca y la oficina de Castro no quisieron confirmar que el alcalde estaba bajo consideración.
Schmall reportó desde Fort Worth, Texas.
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sábado, 21 de diciembre de 2013
Cuba: Raul Castro Issues Stern Warning To Entrepreneurs
HAVANA (AP) — President Raul Castro issued a stern warning to entrepreneurs pushing the boundaries of Cuba's economic reform, telling parliament on Saturday that "those pressuring us to move faster are moving us toward failure."
Castro has legalized small-scale, private businesses in nearly 200 fields since 2010, but has issued tighter regulations on businesses seen as going too far or competing excessively with state enterprises. In recent months, the government has banned the resale of imported hardware and clothing and cracked down on unlicensed private videogame and movie salons.
Castro threw his full weight behind such measures in an address to the biannual meeting of the communist legislature, saying "every step we take must be accompanied by the establishment of a sense of order."
"Inadequate controls by government institutions in the face of illegal activities by private businesspeople weren't resolved in a timely fashion, creating an environment of impunity and stimulating the accelerated growth of activities that were never authorized for certain occupations," Castro said.
He told lawmakers that Cuba wants better relations with the U.S. but will never give in to demands for changes to Cuba's government and economy, saying "we don't demand that the U.S. change its political or social system and we don't accept negotiations over ours."
"If we really want to move our bilateral relations forward, we'll have to learn to respect our differences," Castro said. "If not, we're ready to take another 55 years in the same situation."
Cuba blames a half-century-old U.S. embargo for strangling its economy but Castro's government has also acknowledged that it must reform the state-run economy with a gradual opening to private enterprise. Many Cubans have enthusiastically seized opportunities to make more money with their own businesses, but new entrepreneurs and outside experts alike complain that the government has been sending mixed messages about its openness to private enterprise.
The conflicting signals were apparent in Cuba's handling of the dozens of private home cinemas and video game salons that sprung up around the country this year, drawing crowds of young people willing to spend a few dollars for access to the latest home entertainment technology imported, purportedly for private use, by Cubans returning from the U.S., Canada or other countries.
The government denounced the cinemas as spreading uncultured drivel to the young, and ordered them closed last month for stretching the boundaries on the kinds of private businesses allowed under reforms instituted by Castro. Then came the backlash, with entrepreneurs bemoaning thousands of dollars in lost investment and moviegoers saying they were exasperated by heavy-handedness toward a harmless diversion. The official reaction was swift, and unprecedented.
An article in the Communist Party newspaper Granma on last month acknowledged there was wide disapproval of the ban, and hinted it was being rethought. The same Granma article also offered a full-throated defense of the ban on the reselling of imported hardware and clothes.
Castro appeared to justify all of the recent moves to clamp down on private enterprise.
"We're not ignorant of the fact that those pressuring to move faster are moving us toward failure, toward disunity, and are damaging the people's confidence and support for the construction of socialism and the independence and sovereignty of Cuba."
Several Cubans interviewed on the streets of Havana on Saturday said they generally approved of Castro's speech but wanted more details on economic reforms, and a softer line toward the U.S.
"I would have liked to know exactly what pace of reform we're going to follow," said Daniel Mora, a 72-year-old retired state worker. "And he told the United States that we're ready for another 55 years of blockade, but I'm not ready for that. I'm 72 and I'd like to see the light at the end of the tunnel before I die."
Castro praised the Cold War ties between Cuba and South Africa's anti-apartheid movement but did not mention his handshake with President Barack Obama at Nelson Mandela's funeral this month.
He lamented that growth would come in at 2.7 percent for 2013, nearly a full percentage below the predicted 3.6 percent. He said growth for 2014 was expected to be 2.2 percent.
It is nearly impossible to know on the true size of Cuba's economy because Cuba uses two currencies, a convertible peso for tourists that's pegged to the U.S. dollar and a Cuban peso worth about 4 cents, and the government doesn't clearly distinguish between them in economic statistics.
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Anne-Marie Garcia contributed to this report.
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Michael Weissenstein on Twitter: https://twitter.com/mweissenstein
Andrea Rodriguez on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ARodriguezAP
lunes, 9 de diciembre de 2013
Elián González, 'el niño balsero', sale por primera vez de Cuba y profesa su devoción por Fidel Castro
El cubano Eli?n Gonz?lez protagoniz? en el a?o 2000 un incidente internacional y un debate sobre d?nde deb?a vivir.
Fidel Castro, l?der cubano por aquel entonces luch? con ?xito por conseguir que regresara a Cuba.
A d?a de hoy, Eli?n Gonz?lez se ha convertido en un claro simpatizante del r?gimen cubano. Hace poco ha comentado para un peri?dico de all? que Fidel Castro para ?l "es como un padre". Tambi?n le compar? con un dios: "Yo no profeso ninguna religi?n, pero si lo hiciera, mi dios ser?a Fidel Castro".
Actualmente, Gonz?lez es un cadete militar y estudia ingenier?a industrial.
El joven, que cumpli? veinte a?os el pasado viernes, ha viajado a Quito (Ecuador) junto a otras doscientas personas de la delegaci?n cubana para asistir a una conferencia de la juventud que durar? una semana.
Esta es la primera vez que Eli?n Gonz?lez abandona Cuba desde el a?o 2000, cuando ten?a seis a?os e intent? inmigrar junto a su madre a Estados Unidos. El bote en el que viajaban se hundi?, matando a su madre entre otras personas.
?l fue encontrado con vida en la costa de Florida, aferrado a un neum?tico, y estuvo viviendo un tiempo en Miami con algunos familiares.
La disputa internacional que provoc? la situaci?n de Eli?n Gonz?lez termin? cuando devolvieron la tutela del ni?o a su padre y regres? a Cuba.
De todo esto hace ya m?s de una d?cada, pero seg?n cuenta el Daily News, Eli?n Gonz?lez asegura que las batallas por su tutela contin?an para hacer de ?l una cara reconocible.
