First Secretary of the Communist Party of Cuba explained

Post:First Secretary
Body:the Communist Party of Cuba
Insignia:Communist Party of Cuba logo.svg
Insigniacaption:Logo of the Communist Party of Cuba
Incumbentsince:19 April 2021
Department:Central Committee
Type:Party leader, Supreme leader
Member Of:Central Committee, Politburo, Secretariat
Seat:Palace of the Revolution
Havana, Cuba
Appointer:Central Committee
Termlength:Five years, renewable once
Constituting Instrument:Statute of the Communist Party of Cuba
First:José Miguel Pérez
Deputy:Second Secretary

The First Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Cuba is the top leader of Cuba. The First Secretary is the highest office within the Communist Party of Cuba as well as ranking first in the Politburo, the highest decision-making body in Cuba, which makes the office holder the most powerful person in the Cuban government. In communist states the First or General Secretary of the Communist Party is typically the de facto leader of the country and a more powerful position than state offices such as President (head of state) or Prime Minister (head of government), when those positions are held by different individuals.[1]

The officeholder of the post of first secretary presides over the work of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Cuba (PCC), which is designated as "the organised vanguard of the Cuban nation" and as "the superior driving force of society and the State" by Article 5 of Cuba's constitution. The PCC Central Committee, the Party's highest political-executive organ between convocations of the party congress, has the right to elect and dismiss the first secretary at one of its sessions. The first secretary is responsible for leading the work of the Secretariat, the Party's highest executive organ, and chairing the sessions of the Politburo, the Party's highest political organ. The current first secretary is Miguel Díaz-Canel, elected by the 1st Session of the 8th Central Committee on 19 April 2021, and he concurrently serves as president of Cuba.

The first forerunner organisation to the present-day PCC was formed on 18 August 1925, and it elected the Spain-born José Miguel Pérez as its leader. Due to repressive actions by the Cuban state of Gerardo Machado, Pérez was kicked out of the country thirteen days later, on 31 August. This brought the newly-established party into turmoil, and José Peña Vilaboa took over Pérez's position and kept the position until his death on 13 March 1927. Due to his health struggles, Miguel Valdés García served as acting general secretary for most of Peña Vilaboa's tenure. Valdés García continued to do so until April 1927, when Joaquín Valdés Hernández was elected general secretary. State repression and bad organisation brought party work to a standstill until the Communist International (Comintern) appointed Jorge Abilio Vivó d’Escoto as party general secretary in 1930. In August 1933, a general strike took place in Havana that called for Machado's removal. Vivó is said to have misjudged the revolutionary situation, and he was forced to step down on the Comintern's orders at the 2nd Congress, held on 20–22 April 1934. Blas Roca Calderio was elected in Vivó's place and stayed in office until 24 June 1961 when the party merged with the 26th of July Movement and the Revolutionary Directorate of 13 March Movement to form the Integrated Revolutionary Organizations (IRO), which elected Fidel Castro as its first secretary. The IRO was transformed into the United Party for the Socialist Revolution of Cuba (PURSC) on 26 March 1962. Three years later, on 3 October 1965, the PURSC convened the 1st Congress of the newly-established Communist Party of Cuba. The 1st Central Committee, which had been elected by the 1st Congress, convened for its 1st Session on 3 October 1965 and elected Fidel as first secretary. He remained in office for 49 years until the convocation of the 1st Plenary Session of the 6th Central Committee on 19 April 2011, which elected his brother Raúl Castro to succeed him in office. Raúl remained in office for two electoral terms and was succeeded by Miguel Díaz-Canel on 19 April 2021.

Institutional history

Title! scope=col
Establishedscope=col Abolishedscope=col Established byscope=col class="unsortable"
General Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Cuba
18 August 192513 August 19391st Congress
General Secretary of the Central Committee of the Revolutionary Communist Union
13 August 193922 January 1944Central Committee of the 3rd Congress
General Secretary of the Central Committee of the Popular Socialist Party
22 January 194424 June 19614th Congress
First Secretary of the National Directorate of the Integrated Revolutionary Organizations
26 July 196126 March 1962?
First Secretary of the Central Committee of the United Party for the Socialist Revolution of Cuba
26 March 19623 October 1965?
First Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Cuba
3 October 1965Present1st Congress

Officeholders

! scope=col colspan="2"
Officeholderscope=col class="unsortable" Took officescope=col class="unsortable" Left officescope=col scope=col Termscope=col scope=col scope=col scope=col class="unsortable"
118 August 192531 August 19251st
(1925–34)
189619251936
2September 192513 March 1927 years1st
(1925–34)
189119251927
3April 1927?? years1st
(1925–34)
?1925?
429 March 193022 April 19341st
(1925–34)
190619271979
522 April 193424 June 19612nd–?
(1934–1961)
190819301987
626 July 196119 April 2011PROV–5th
(1961–2011)
192619552016
719 April 201119 April 20216th8th
(2011–21)
19311953Alive
819 April 2021Incumbent8th–present
(2021–present)
19601985Alive

See also

References

Books

Journal articles

Web articles

Footnotes

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Raul Castro to lead Cuba's Communist Party until 2021. FRANCE 24. 19 April 2018. "I confirm to this assembly that Raul Castro, as first secretary of the Communist Party, will lead the decisions about the future of the country," Diaz-Canel said.. 23 April 2018. 18 July 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180718003647/https://amp.france24.com/en/20180419-raul-castro-leadership-cuba-communist-party-2021-diaz-canel. dead.