Cuba starts election cycle, likely last of Castro presidency

By on June 14, 2017

In this Tuesday, Dec. 27, 2016 file photo, Cuba’s President Raul Castro casts his vote to elect a new member of the state council, the biannual legislative session at the National Assembly in Havana, Cuba. (Ladyrene Perez, Cubadebate via AP)

HAVANA — Cuba is starting an electoral process that is expected to end with President Raúl Castro stepping down in February.

The Council of State says in Wednesday’s state media that voting for municipal assemblies will take place on Oct. 22. It doesn’t set the date of voting for the country’s parliament, which selects the Council of State and the president. Elections are held every five years.

Castro has said he’ll step down as president in February, although he is expected to remain head of the ruling Communist Party.

Above the municipal level, Cuban elections are choices between candidates preselected by the Cuban Communist Party and related organizations. That guarantees that the country’s nominally representative bodies in practice answer to the president and a small group of high-ranking officials.

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