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Cuba
is governed under a constitution adopted in 1976, as
subsequently amended. It defines the country as a socialist
state in which all power belongs to the working people.
The Communist Party is Cuba's only legal political party.
The
central legislature of Cuba is the National Assembly
of People's Power, whose 510 members are elected to
five-year terms by direct universal voting. The National
Assembly, which regularly meets twice during the year,
elects a Council of State of about 30 members to carry
out its functions when it is not in session. The Council
of State includes a president, who is the country's
head of state; a first vice president; and five other
vice presidents. The National Assembly also chooses
a Council of Ministers, which is Cuba's chief administrative
body. The council is headed by the president.
Cuba
is divided into 169 municipalities and 14 provinces;
the Isla de la Juventud municipality is not part of
any province, and its affairs are overseen directly
by the central government. Each municipality has an
assembly composed of delegates elected to terms of two
and one-half years. The municipal assemblies choose
executive committees, the members of which make up five
regional assemblies for each province. These regional
bodies also have executive committees, which together
form the membership of the provincial assembly (in turn,
headed by an executive committee). At each level the
executive committee oversees the day-to-day administrative
functions of its assembly.
Judicial
power is exercised by the People's Supreme Court on
the national level, by courts of justice in cases that
are provincial or regional in nature, and by the municipal
courts. Revolutionary tribunals are convened to deal
with crimes against the state.
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