On the list of candidates for deputies to the National Assembly of People's Power for the municipality of Segundo Frente, in this province, there is the photo and data of Army General Raul Castro.
Next to the leader of the Cuban Revolution, in the electoral formula, the constituency delegate Alender Chaveco Torres, 47 years old and president of the Economic and Local Development Commission of the government there, both in full equality of conditions and opportunities for the scrutiny that will take place next Sunday 26th.
Thus, both reviews have been published in the newspapers Granma and Sierra Maestra and in the corresponding spaces of Cuban television, which allow voters to have a better knowledge of the 470 men and women who will exercise their right to vote to integrate the new Parliament.
Nuances and symbolisms reveal this coincidence between Chaveco Torres and the legend incarnated in the 91-year-old man who assaulted the Moncada Barracks on July 26, 1953 and disembarked in the expedition of the Granma yacht on December 2, 1956 to integrate the initial nucleus of the Rebel Army in the mountains of the Sierra Maestra.
On March 11, 1958, the then Commander founded, by order of Fidel Castro, the II Frank País Eastern Front, which has become a demarcation that is the total work of the transformations initiated since the triumph of January 1st, 1959 against the tyranny of Fulgencio Batista and continuity of those developed there since then.
Historians agree that in that settlement in the highlands of the Sierra Cristal, where the insurrectional command was located, a model of productive and social development was forged that became an example, mainly for its advanced conceptions in education and health.
Since the revolutionary victory proclaimed here on the balconies of the City Hall, in front of the central Céspedes Park, Raúl Castro's life continued his total dedication to the Revolution and his serenity and intelligence have been a strong reason to trust in his leadership of the destinies of the Homeland.
Consistent transparency is one of the premises of the Cuban democratic system, which is put to the test in each election process and refutes the lies and fallacies that attempt to delegitimize it, based on the Western model of representative democracy, which has been battered and has fallen into disrepair in many latitudes.
No better example of the relevance of these practices in Cuba is the fullness and freedom of the voters of this mountainous municipality that will be able to decide with the mark on the ballot their approval or not of a common Cuban and an icon of the most recent deeds for independence and dignity.