Nearly sixty years of rule by the Castro brothers, Cuba swears-in Miguel Diaz-Canel to replace Raul Castro as president on Thursday.
Cuban Communist Party stalwart, Diaz-Canel replaced Castro, to bring a new chapter for the island and also aimed at preserving Cuban socialism.
The National Assembly swore in Diaz-Canel, with 603 out of 604 lawmakers present voting for the 57-year old, marking a generational shift from 86-year old Castro.
The transition for Cuba, while a historic shift from an era that started with Fidel and Raul Castro’s 1959 revolution, was not expected to herald sweeping changes to the island’s state-run economy and one-party system, one of the last in the world.
For many Cubans, struggling with economic hardships and frustrated with the government’s emphasis on continuity rather than change, the transition in leader is seen as unlikely to bring much beyond the symbolism of a new leader.
“We always wish the symbolic would translate into real and concrete actions for our lives,” said Jose Jasan Nieves, 30, the editor of an alternative news outlet to the state-run media monopoly. “But this isn’t the case.”