The Bolivarian Elections A Real Lesson in Democracy

VENEZUELA
A real lesson in democracy
The Bolivarian Revolution obtained 71% of the vote in the country’s December 10 elections, the largest margin of victory in Venezuela’s history, winning 308 of the 335 mayor’s offices
Author: Alina Perera Robbio | perera@juventudrebelde.cu
december 13, 2017 13:12:27

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Photo: www.eitb.eus

President Nicolás Maduro Moros described the voter turn out for December 10 municipal elections as “extraordinary,” noting, “In the last 140 days, on three occasions, we have exercised our popular will, our national sovereignty, our ability to make decisions.”
The head of state commented to the press, shortly before the vote, that 15 checks of the electoral system had been conducted, saying that as soon as the voting stations across the country were closed, 54% would be audited, and “This is the only place in the world where this is done.”
Maduro recalled that this is the 24th vote in the Bolivarian Revolution’s 18 years, and that the Venezuelan people have been subjected to every kind of warfare, from abroad and internally, yet, “We have become accustomed to this, and we have strengthened the nation’s political consciousness. No matter the economic war, no matter the psychological war, no matter the media war – the people always step up.”
He emphasized the importance of the battle for peace, saying, “The only alternative is the debate of ideas, political participation…”
Over the course of election day, several leaders of the Bolivarian Revolution shared their views with the press.
Diosdado Cabello, first vice president of the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV) commented to Venezolana de Televisión (VTV) that during these moments, it is once again made clear that the nation is free and sovereign, and will not accept meddling or intervention by any other country in internal affairs.
Elías Jaua, vice president for Social Development and the Missions Revolution, stated on VTV that Venezuela continues to have vigorous popular participation, while Foreign Minister Jorge Arreaza stated in his analysis that just when the violent opposition thought the leadership of the Revolution, the government and President, were weakened, the people reacted and peace was established.
President Maduro called on local authorities elected December 10 to govern with the people, to strengthen social policies of comprehensive attention, and build unity within revolutionary forces.
“I congratulate the Venezuelan people,” he wrote on his Twitter account, “for this great victory… We have won 308 of the 335 mayors’ offices and won 70% of the vote. Now it’s on to govern with the people in the streets, in the neighborhoods, in settlements, and to work for the unity of revolutionary forces,”
Reports indicate that the Revolution obtained 71% of the vote, representing
6,517,606 voters, as compared to the opposition’s 2,749,000.
Jorge Rodríguez, head of the Zamora Command running the PSUV election campaign, noted that this is the largest margin of victory any political force has ever achieved in Venezuela’s history.
He added that Chavista forces now hold more mayor’s offices than ever before, recalling that in 2013, they won 255.

Raúl attends funeral tribute for Armando Hart, an essential figure in the country’s history

Raúl attends funeral tribute for Armando Hart
Army General Raúl Castro Ruz, President Cuba’s Councils of State and Ministers, attended the funeral tribute which took place at the Center for Martí Studies to honor Armando Hart Dávalos, an essential figure in the country’s history

Author: Leticia Martínez Hernández | internet@granma.cu
november 28, 2017 08:11:49

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Army General Raúl Castro Ruz, President Cuba’s Councils of State and Ministers, attended the funeral tribute which took place at the Center for Martí Studies to honor Armando Hart Dávalos, an essential figure in the country’s history.

Accompanied by other members of the Political Bureau, Raúl headed the final honor guard for the fervent revolutionary who based his thought on that of Martí and Fidel, and dedicated his entire life to the homeland.

The ceremony’s central remarks were delivered by First Vice President Miguel Díaz -Canel Bermúdez, who recalled the Hart ‘s work, and the extraordinary example of loyalty, selflessness, conviction, and consistent adherence to principles, which he leaves for today’s generation and those of the future.

Armando Hart, a leading figure during the Cuban revolution who oversaw a literacy campaign

Armando Hart — known for his shock of white hair and dark-rimmed glasses — focused on promoting the life and works of Cuban independence hero José Martí. (Desmond Boylan/Associated Press)

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By Michael Weissenstein November 27 at 12:16 PM
Armando Hart, a leading figure during the Cuban revolution who oversaw a literacy campaign that tried to ensure that all Cubans could read and write and spent much of his career as culture minister, died Nov. 26 in Havana. He was 87.

Cuban state media said the cause was respiratory failure.

Designated education minister shortly after the 1959 revolutionary triumph that put Fidel Castro in power, Mr. Hart was tasked with sending more than 100,000 volunteers across the island for the literacy campaign. He served six years in the post and then was organization secretary for the newly formed Communist Party. He was culture minister from 1976 to 1997.

In his later years, Mr. Hart — who was known for his shock of white hair and dark-rimmed glasses — focused on promoting the life and works of Cuban independence hero José Martí.

Mr. Hart was reelected as a member of the party’s Central Committee in April 2011, although he gave up a seat on the more powerful Politburo. He also had sat on the island’s supreme governing authority, the Council of State, until he was removed in February 2008 amid reports that he was in ill health.

Armando Hart Davalos was born in Havana on June 13, 1930. He studied law at the University of Havana, where he joined the youth wing of the Orthodox Party, a major political party at the time.

After Fulgencio Batista took power in a 1952 coup, Mr. Hart joined Cuba’s Federation of University Students in protests against the new government. That same year, he graduated with a law degree and joined the opposition.

When Castro launched his revolutionary struggle with an unsuccessful attack on a military barracks in the eastern city of Santiago on July 26, 1953, Mr. Hart became an early member of the movement’s urban support group. He and other July 26 Movement organizers carried on after Castro and the other survivors were imprisoned and then later traveled to Mexico to form a rebel army.

Mr. Hart was arrested numerous times for his organizing activities in eastern Cuba after the rebels returned to Cuba in late 1956 to launch their guerrilla war from the island’s eastern mountains. His last arrest was in early 1958, and he remained behind bars until the revolution’s triumph nearly a year later on New Year’s Day 1959. Castro soon named Mr. Hart education minister.

In his later years, Mr. Hart published several books on political and cultural thought, including “Perfiles” (“Profiles”), a 1995 collection of texts studying the lives and works of Cuba’s political and intellectual leaders.

Among Mr. Hart’s favorite leaders was Martí. In February 1997, he was named director of the Cuban government’s Office of Martí Program, created to publish and promote Martí’s extensive writings. Mr. Hart also headed the José Martí Cultural Society.

Mr. Hart received the Order of Felix Varela, First Grade, the highest award Cuba’s communist government grants to Cuban and foreign intellectuals. The Cuban Foreign Ministry awarded him its Raúl Roa García medal, named for the first foreign minister under the revolutionary government.

Recibió Raúl al canciller de la República Popular Democrática de Corea En el fraternal encuentro

Recibió Raúl al canciller de la República Popular Democrática de Corea
En el fraternal encuentro, ambas partes constataron los históricos lazos de amistad que existen entre las dos naciones y dialogaron sobre temas internacionales de interés común

Autor: Redacción Digital | internet@granma.cu
25 de noviembre de 2017 17:11:30
Raúl Castro recibió al canciller de Corea del Norte

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Foto: Estudios Revolución
El General de Ejército Raúl Castro Ruz, Presidente de los Consejos de Estado y de Ministros, recibió en la mañana del pasado viernes al compañero Ri Yong Ho, ministro de Relaciones Exteriores de la República Popular Democrática de Corea, quien realizó una visita oficial a Cuba.

En el fraternal encuentro, ambas partes constataron los históricos lazos de amistad que existen entre las dos naciones y dialogaron sobre temas internacionales de interés común.

El canciller norcoreano trasladó un saludo del Presidente Kim Jong Un dirigido al General de Ejército, el cual fue reciprocado por este, así como un mensaje verbal y las condolencias por el primer aniversario del fallecimiento del líder histórico de la Revolución Cubana Fidel Castro Ruz.

Acompañó al visitante Pak Chang Yul, embajador de la República Popular Democrática de Corea. Por la parte cubana Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla, ministro de Relaciones Exteriores.

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Bruno Rodríguez receives Foreign Minister of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea

Ri Yong Ho stated that he was pleased to be visiting the island

Author: Ernesto J. Gómez Figueredo | internet@granma.cu

november 22, 2017 14:11:02

“This visit is a demonstration of the consolidation of the ties of cooperation and friendship between both nations, and which are the legacy of historic leaders Fidel Castro Ruz and Kim Il-Sung,” stated Cuba’s Foreign Minister, Bruno Rodríguez, on receiving his counterpart from theDemocratic People’s Republic of Korea, Ri Yong Ho, this November 22.
During the meeting, which took place at the Cuban Foreign Ministry in Havana, Rodríguez noted that the island supports peace in the Korean Peninsula, and believes that a lasting political solution in the region can only be reached through dialogue.
The Cuban minister also noted that the country strongly rejects the imposition of sanctions and unilateral, arbitrary lists drawn up the United States, which violate International Law.
“We would like to take this opportunity to reiterate our demand for the sovereignty and independence of all states, free self-determination of the peoples, against the use and/or threat of force by states, the resolution of conflicts through peaceful means, every state’s right to establish its own economic, political and social model, and non-interference in the internal affairs of any state,” he added
Rodríguez went on to note that the minister’s visit will contribute to strengthening ties and to the continuation of fruitful political dialogue between the two peoples, parties and governments.
Meanwhile, Ri Yong Ho stated that he was pleased to be visiting the island. “Although Cuba and the DPRK are geographically distant, we have many similarities and I feel at home here,” he stated.