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| President of the Republic of Cuba | |
|---|---|
| Presidente de la República de Cuba | |
Presidential standard | |
since 10 October 2019 | |
| Presidential Office of Cuba Executive branch of the Government of Cuba | |
| Style | Mr President (informal) His Excellency (diplomatic) |
| Type | Head of state |
| Member of | National Assembly of People's Power |
| Reports to | Council of State |
| Residence | Palacio de la Revolución |
| Nominator | National Assembly of People's Power |
| Appointer | National Assembly of People's Power |
| Term length | Five years, renewable once[1] |
| Constituting instrument | Constitution of Cuba (2019) |
| Precursor | President of the Council of State |
| Formation | April 12, 1902 (123 years ago) (1902-04-12) |
| First holder | Tomás Estrada Palma |
| Abolished | December 1976–October 2019 |
| Deputy | Vice President |
| Website | Official website |
|
Related topics |
Thepresident of Cuba (Spanish:Presidente de Cuba), officially thepresident of the Republic of Cuba (Spanish:Presidente de la República de Cuba), is thehead of state ofCuba. The office in its current form was established under theConstitution of 2019. The President is the second-highest office in Cuba and the highest state office.Miguel Díaz-Canel became President of theCouncil of State on 19 April 2018, taking over fromRaúl Castro, and has been President of Cuba since 10 October 2019.
TheFirst Secretary of the Communist Party of Cuba continues to be the highest-ranking political position in Cuba.Fidel Castro held the position from 1976 to 2011, andRaúl Castro from 2011 until the 8thCongress of the Communist Party of Cuba, held 16–19 April 2021, when he retired from office.[2]
Under the 1901 constitution, Cuba had apresidential system based on that of the United States.
In 1940, a new constitution reformed the government into asemi-presidential system.
On 2 December 1976, the executive was reformed again by a new national constitution, this time in emulation of theSoviet Union. The presidential office was abolished and replaced by a collective head of state, theCouncil of State, elected by theNational Assembly of People's Power. However, unlike the USSR's arrangements, where the chairmen of thePresidium of the Supreme Soviet and theCouncil of Ministers were distinct posts, the chairman of the Council of State also chaired theCouncil of Ministers. Furthermore, unlikeEnglish andRussian,Spanish does not distinguish between the terms "chairman" (Russian:председатель) and "president" (Russian:президент), translating both as "Presidente". Thus, when back-translated into English, the term used was not "Chairman" (on the precedent of similar institutions in countries whose languages have a chairman/president distinction, such as the USSR andEast Germany), but rather "President", from the shared etymology with the Spanish "Presidente".
On 24 February 2019, another constitution – Cuba's current – was adopted in a referendum. Under it, the government was again re-organized, and the posts of President and Prime Minister were restored.[3] This reorganization took effect on 11 October 2019. Díaz-Canel was President of the Council of State until 10 October 2019 and President of the Republic after that date. Under the new constitution, the position of President of the Council of State continues as a separate role, subordinate to President of the Republic. The new document also limited the President to two consecutive five-year terms.
In cases of the absence, illness or death of the President of Cuba, the Vice President assumes the presidential duties.
The President of Cuba is mandated to have the following powers as per theConstitution: