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Who
we are
The
Unión Liberal Cubana (ULC) is a political party established
in the exile, branched inside Cuba, conceived as a contribution
to convey the ideas of democracy, human rights and a market economy
into the Island. The term "liberal" follows the European
and Latin American meaning, not that prevailing in the United
States.
In
any case, the ULC´s will is to grow inside Cuba; we
exercise every effort to link ourselves to disidents, intelectuals,
and the country´s thinking class, and we struggle to
keep them updated on the unstoppable advance of the liberal
ideas,
ideas which are beginning to take hold on the Island, simply
because this is the hour of liberalism.
The
ULC is a founding member of the Cuban Democratic Platform (1990),
a coalition of three parties (the Coordinadora Social
Demócrata and the Partido Demócrata Cristiano de
Cuba being the other two), who agree in the search of peaceful
solutions to the Cuban problem. On an international level, the
ULC is an active member of the Liberal International (IL) , an
organisation with more than 70 liberal parties in Latin America,
Asia, Africa, and Europe. Carlos Alberto Montaner, the ULC´s
founder and Chairman, is also a Vice President of the IL. Two
other liberal parties within Cuba, the Partido Liberal Democrático
de Cuba, chaired by Osvaldo Alfonso Valdés, and Solidaridad
Cubana, presided over by Fernando Sánchez López,
are fraternal members of the IL as "observers," although
it is expected that they will be full members some time in
the future.
What we think
On
our planet (and Latin America is no exception) we are now living
the resurgence of a time-renewed liberalism, the crass
failure of the socialist experiments, and the impetus of
a new liberal thought, rooted in intellectuals like I. Berlin,
K. Popper,
C. Rangel, or the recent Nobel Economics laureates Gary Becker,
Richard Coase, James Buchanan, Milton Friedman and Friedrich
von Hayek, all followers of von Misses´s work and the
so-called Austrian School. Who ever said that liberalism
belongs to the
past? There is no other current of thought so strictly modern!
In short, this means that nowadays, after a century of failed
experiments, the end has come to the Marxist utopias, and the
individual has been restored the important role he or she have
to play in society. From there stems a healthy wave of privatisations,
the reduction of the size and the functions of the State, the
reduction in public spending, and the recognition of the commanding
character of private enterprise and a civil society. From there,
also, stems the discredit of an economy planned by bureaucrats
far removed from daily realities, and the realisation that the
tools of development and growth reside in the free market.
It
is not the government who must watch over the citizenry. Just
the opposite. It is not the government who must steer
the individual. Just the reverse. It is not the government
who must
assume the responsibility over humanity. On the contrary.
Of course, this does not mean that it is not the State´s
duty to attend to the old and handicapped, or to provide
whatever means are necessary so that everyone can compete and
seek a
better
living. Without health and education, without a flexible
and porous society that fosters upward mobility, it would be
senseless
to talk about a competitive spirit.
As
should be expected, together with the vindication of the liberal
thought in economics, there is a political counterpart:
the liberal democracy. Democracy in the company of its best
attributes: formal freedom, a state of law without privileges
or special
groups, governments constantly subject to their citizens´ watch,
respect for human rights, a plurality of political parties,
total transparency of information, and a special devotion
for tolerance,
a civic virtue that makes peace and order possible.
Simply
put, after the fracas of fascism (which in Latin America was
mixed with militarism and populism), and the diverse forms
of socialism, the wise conclusion has been reached that freedom
is the best cure against poverty and injustice, and that there
is no coincidence that the twenty most free countries on earth,
are, precisely, the most prosperous. The greater the freedom
to produce and to sell, the greater the freedom to fearlessly
examine the problems of society, result in larger degrees of
general wealth. And freedom includes respect for people just
as they are, because liberalism disavows all of those dangerous
manipulations of "social engineering" or "political
genetics" that so many adversities have brought to humankind
upon trying to submit it to "perfections" decided by
small groups of "enlightened" who see themselves
as holders of the absolute truth. Liberalism does not claim
to possess
any definitive truth: it does not know, nor does it believe
it possible to know the path of history, and does not try to
change
human nature, but rather, its ulimate goal is to create an
adequate and legal framework, so that the most frequent virtues
of Humanking
find a fertile soil, while the space is reduced for less beneficial
and agreeable behaviours.
Projections and goals
After four decades of errors and persecutions based on socialism,
liberalism for Cubans is a healer and a great antidote. Healer,
because it is a noble way to understand society that can alleviate
tensions and repair wounds after the ineviable fall of socialism;
antidote because in its very basic foundation lies the vaccine
against future totalitarian ventures. Actually, in 1989, a few
days after the Berlin wall fall, and when it was evident that
communism was about to disappear from the face of the earth,
a group of Cuban liberals took on the task of creating a party
with very defined short, medium, and long term goals.
On
the short run, there was no doubt about that task: contribute
to the end of the castroist dictatorship, albeit through
peaceful means and carefully avoiding a bloody conclusion.
In fact,
since 1974, when the Portuguese dictatorship is dislodged,
until the
collapse of the Eastern European Communist tyrannies (and
including the Latin American experiences in Argentina, Chile,
Uruguay,
and Brazil), all democratic transitions (with, partially,
the exception of Rumania) had the same development standard:
political
negotiations among between the régime in power and
the opposition, that ended in dictator-liquidating free elections.
As it had occurred in more than a dozen countries, there
was
no reason why the same could not happen in Cuba. Further,
we Cuban liberals believed it was highly convenient for the
end
of castroism to take place among negotiations and free elections,
not only to spare our compatriots the pain and devastation
that violence would bring to Cuba, but also to break away
from a nefarious
revolutionary tradition, i.e., the wrong conviction that
is is fair and patriotic to replace bad governments forcefully.
In short, we liberals think that this sad historic juncture
will perhaps bring a positive balance: the substitution of a
violent political culture for one of persuasion, dialogue and
compromise. And this wish is rooted in history: we must pay attention
to the lessons it gives us.
The 1990 creation of the Cuban Democratic Platform proposes
itself not only to challenge Castro on the political arena, but
also to contribute to the furthering of the transit to freedom,
when the changes take place, by bringing to Cuba the beneficial
democratising influences of scores of friendly governments, and
hundreds of akin political parties, given the fact that most
Free World nations are governed by groups belonging to one of
the three political streams present in the Platform..
To
summarise, the ULC formulates a short term policy (end castroism
without bloodshsed or violence; one over the medium
term (a soft
transition to another state model, with the assistance of
a vast network of friendly government and parties), while setting
up
the foundations of the party´s long terem objectives.
Over the long term, the ULC is born with the vocation to become
a great political party capable of giving the country ideas,
projects, institutional stability, and to provide a ground training
the best political leaders of a future Cuba. There is no democracy
without strong political parties. And there are no strong political
parties if, within them, there is not a consistent cosmovision
that diagnoses the evils that affect society, and offers a flexible
answer to solve them. Fortunately, liberalism furnishes all that.
It is not an ideology, but a rational way to understand life,
essentially based on the defense of freedom and individual responsibility.
Luckily,
in Cuba´s political tradition, the best heads
have been liberals: from Arango y Parreño to Ignacio Agramonte,
from José Martí to Jorge Mañach or Carlos
Márquez Sterling, the most serious and prudent statesmen
belong to the liberal mainstream, although many of them did
not belong to parties bearing that name.
The Unión Liberal
Cubana collects that tradition and culture, links them to the
liberalism of our day, gives them
a new form and a new content. The ULC is the future. Very simple.
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