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Fidel Castro made many statements affirming that Cuba is a democracy or has democratic features. [36] In 1960, Castro made a speech to the General Assembly referring to Cuba in relation to other Latin American nations, "We are speaking of democracy. If Government is of people and democratic, people can be consulted, as we are doing here.
In the 2018 parliamentary elections, 80% of voters voted for the full list and only 20% selected individual candidates. [2]Miguel Díaz-Canel succeeded Raúl Castro, brother of Fidel Castro, as the First Secretary of the Communist Party of Cuba on 19 April 2021, marking the end of the Castro era in Cuba.
El Capitolio, former seat of the National Assembly of People's Power. Cuba has an elected national legislature, the National Assembly of People's Power (Asamblea Nacional del Poder Popular), [20]: 38 which has 612 members, elected every 5 years and holds brief sessions to ratify decisions by the executive branch. The National Assembly convenes ...
the first select, followed by an expression which is often referred to as the control expression or control variable of the switch statement; subsequent lines defining the actual cases (the values), with corresponding sequences of statements for execution when a match occurs
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José Agustín Caballero offered "a charter for Cuban autonomy under Spanish rule" in Diario de la Habana in 1810, [7] elaborated as the Project for an Autonomous Government in Cuba in 1811. [8] The next year, Bayamo attorney Joaquín Infante living in Caracas wrote his Constitutional Project for the Island of Cuba. He reconciled his liberal ...
[4] [5] Cuba is a one-party state, with the PCC being described as the "superior driving force of the society and the state" in the Constitution of Cuba, and all other political parties are illegal. [5] There is only one candidate for each seat in the Assembly, and all candidates are nominated by committees that are firmly controlled by the PCC.