Trump’s Game Plan

Published in La Prensa
(Nicaragua) on 1 September 2020
by Carlos Alberto Montaner (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Andy Barton. Edited by Helaine Schweitzer.
At last, the conventions have ended. Donald Trump’s convention had a much larger audience than Biden’s, but the surprising thing is that Americans did not pay enough attention to either one.

The White House lawn was the perfect setting for projecting Trump’s message. The argument that the law prohibits the use of public spaces for party political campaigning by parties was fainter than the silent presence of COVID-19. These are exceptional times. Nevertheless, those attending Trump’s convention, with the exception of a few respectful citizens among the crowds, did not wear masks or respect required social distancing measures. May the Lord have mercy on them.

The Republican campaign theme has been the supposed “socialism” of the Democrats. I have heard this argument before, and I do not believe it. Neither Joe Biden nor Kamala Harris have anything to do with the communist vision of society.

I remember the Spanish elections of 1982, in which Felipe González triumphed with an absolute majority. A Cuban with whom I worked, a good person, entered my office to tell me that he was leaving for the United States. He had suffered considerably from Fidel Castro’s collectivist delusions, having been forced to sow “Caturra” coffee in the cordón de La Habana.* “Why are you leaving?” I asked him. “He [González] can stick his cord of olives where the sun don’t shine.” Any reasoning I could have put forward would have blown up in the face of my colleague’s lived experience.

Four Cubans were featured at the Republican National Convention. Florida Lt. Gov. Jeanette Núñez, Mercedes Schlapp, Lourdes Aguirre and Máximo Álvarez, a man who delivered a very persuasive speech. He arrived in Florida on the back of “Operation Peter Pan,” orchestrated by Cuban priests and the CIA during the John F. Kennedy administration.

It is likely that none of the above would have been able to settle in the United States with an anti-immigrant nationalist in the White House like Trump.

The proof is there to see. Trump, who promised to tear up Barack Obama’s executive orders, respected the one that put an end to the “wet feet, dry feet” order signed by Bill Clinton, which allowed Cubans to seek asylum in the United States or show up at any border post in order to receive American protection. Trump does not want Cubans. At least, he does not want them on American soil.

Not only does he deny Venezuelans the temporary protected status requested by Rep. Mario Díaz-Balart and 30 other members of Congress, despite the fact he knows of the failed communist dictatorship there, Trump is also playing with lives of the 800,000 “Dreamers”— Americans, sociologically speaking, who were dragged to the U.S. by their parents—all for the simple reason that his base does not like immigrants.

At most, Cubans represent 4% of the electorate in Florida; they cannot even win in Miami-Dade. In the election prior to Trump’s, Obama obtained 49% of the Cuban vote. Trump might get about 60% of the Cuban vote in Nov. 3 election. However, Puerto Ricans, clustered around Orlando, Florida, could hand the victory to Biden, as they have cause to feel insulted by the White House. According to Miles Taylor, a senior official at the Department of Homeland Security, Trump attempted to sell Puerto Rico as if the island were just another property in the board game “Monopoly,” without taking into account that for over a century since 1917, Puerto Ricans have been American citizens as a matter of birthright.

I cannot be a Trump supporter, precisely because Trump is an anti-immigrant nationalist and a protectionist, three labels that inspire strong aversion within me. I like that he is prudent, theoretically speaking, that he prefers to lower government spending before increasing taxes, and that he moved the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem. On the other hand, his outrageous hyperbole annoys me, as does his bullying and his inability to understand that the Danes do not want to sell Greenland or that NATO members do not like being publicly insulted..

I understand that his idea is to earn the support of evangelical Christians and that he publicly takes the side of the anti-abortion camp, even if it is a matter that will be resolved by the Supreme Court. Nevertheless, someone with a record of his sexual exploits, who takes pride in grabbing women between their legs, surely does this more as a campaign sacrifice than because of any deeply held conviction. This is what Jerushah Duford, Billy Graham’s devotional granddaughter, demands as she habitually accuses him of being an unrepentant hypocrite.

There are now only two months until the election on Nov. 3, so we will see what happens then. According to Real Clear Politics, Biden is ahead in the polls, but we already know that this counts for little.

*Translator’s note: The author is referring to “the Havana cord,” a failed agricultural project in late ‘60s post-revolutionary Cuba intended to provide coffee to Havana by creating a loop of plantations around the circumference of the city.


La estrategia de Donald Trump

Al fin terminaron las convenciones. La de Trump fue mucho más vistosa que la de Biden. Lo asombroso es que los estadounidenses no le prestaron la atención debida ni a una ni a otra.

Los jardines de la Casa Blanca eran un set natural para proyectar el mensaje de Trump. El argumento de que la ley prohíbe la utilización de espacios públicos para hacer campañas partidistas es más débil que la silenciosa presencia del Covid-19. Son épocas especiales. Sin embargo, los asistentes, salvo unos cuantos ciudadanos respetuosos de los demás, no portaban mascarillas ni guardaban la “distancia social” debida. Dios los coja confesados.

El tema de la campaña republicana es el supuesto socialismo de los demócratas. Ese argumento me ha mordido antes. No me lo creo. Ni Joe Biden ni Kamala Harris tienen nada que ver con la visión comunista de la sociedad.

Recuerdo las elecciones de 1982 en España, cuando triunfó Felipe González por mayoría absoluta. Un cubano que trabajaba conmigo, muy buena gente, entró en mi despacho a decirme que se iba a Estados Unidos. “¿Por qué?”, le pregunté. “Porque el cordón de aceitunas se lo mete su madre”. Él había sufrido mucho por las locuras colectivistas de Castro. Había sido obligado a sembrar café caturra en el “cordón de La Habana”. Cualquier razonamiento que yo alegara se estrellaba contra su experiencia.

Cuatro cubanos figuraron en la Convención republicana. La vicegobernadora de Florida, Jeanette Núñez, Mercedes Schlapp, Lourdes Aguirre y Máximo Álvarez, un señor que pronunció un discurso muy persuasivo. Llegó a Florida por la operación “Peter Pan” organizada por los curas y la CIA durante el gobierno de John F. Kennedy.

Probablemente, ninguno de ellos se hubiera establecido en Estados Unidos de haber estado en la Casa Blanca un nacionalista antinmigrante como el señor Trump.

Prueba al canto: Trump, que prometió arrancar de cuajo las “órdenes ejecutivas” de Obama, ha respetado la que le puso fin a la llamada “pies secos y pies mojados” firmada por Bill Clinton, que les permitía a los cubanos pedir asilo en Estados Unidos o presentarse en cualquier puesto fronterizo para recabar la protección americana. Trump no quiere a los cubanos. Por lo menos no los quiere en territorio americano.

No solo les niega a los venezolanos el TPS (Temporary Protected Status) solicitado por Mario Díaz-Balart y otros 30 congresistas, pese a saber que en Venezuela hay una fracasada dictadura comunista, y juega con los ochocientos mil “soñadores”, estadounidenses sociológicos que vinieron al país arrastrados por sus padres, sencillamente porque a sus bases no les gustan los inmigrantes.

Grosso modo los cubanos apenas constituyen el 4% de los votos de la Florida. Ni siquiera pueden ganar en Miami-Dade. En las últimas elecciones Obama obtuvo el 49% de los sufragios cubanos. En las del 3 de noviembre acaso a Trump lo respalde el 60%, pero los puertorriqueños, avecindados en torno a Orlando, tal vez le den la victoria a Biden, porque tienen razones para sentirse ofendidos por la Casa Blanca. Según Miles Taylor, un alto oficial del DHS (Department of Homeland Security) Donald Trump pretendió vender Puerto Rico, como si la Isla fuese una pieza más del juego Monopoly, sin tomar en cuenta que desde 1917, hace más de un siglo, los boricuas son ciudadanos norteamericanos “de nacimiento”.

No puedo ser trumpista, precisamente, porque Trump es un nacionalista antinmigrante, proteccionista, tres categorías que me producen un enorme rechazo. Me gusta que sea (teóricamente al menos) prudente y que prefiera bajar el gasto antes que subir los impuestos, y que haya mudado la sede diplomática a Jerusalén, aunque me irrita su fanfarronería hiperbólica y su actitud de bully incapaz de comprender que los daneses no quieran vender Groenlandia o a los socios de la OTAN no les guste ser maltratados públicamente.

Entiendo que quiera sumar a los cristianos evangélicos, y que tome públicamente partido con los “pro life”, aunque sea un tema resuelto por la Corte Suprema, pero alguien con su biografía al sur de la cintura, que se ufana por agarrar a las señoras por la entrepierna, seguramente lo hace como un sacrificio electoral más que como una convicción arraigada, lo que le reclama Jerushah Duford, la piadosa nieta de Billy Graham, que suele acusarlo de ser un gran hipócrita.

Solo faltan dos meses para las elecciones del 3 de noviembre. Veremos qué ocurre. Según Real Clear Politics, Biden está delante en las encuestas. Pero ya sabemos que eso no quiere decir gran cosa. [© FIRMAS PRESS]
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