The European Parliament voted 283 to 199, with 85 abstentions, on 18 June for Magnitsky-style sanctions, asset freezes and travel bans aimed at named individuals, on Miguel Diaz-Canel and GAESA leadership, and urged suspending the 2016 Political Dialogue and Cooperation Agreement (PDCA), the framework treaty governing EU-Cuba relations 1. The resolution cited 1,281 political prisoners and characterised Cuba as nearing failed-state status, with 89% of families in extreme poverty.
A Parliament resolution does not bind the EU Council, where member states decide restrictive measures, and Spain's tourism stake has long held that body at engagement. The PDCA's human-rights clause requires Council consensus to trigger, which Madrid has blocked since 2016 on commercial grounds. That veto rests on a stake Spain is losing. Melia and Iberostar have already exited GAESA-linked hotels under US secondary-sanctions pressure , , which weakens Madrid's commercial rationale even as the formal veto persists. EU High Representative Kaja Kallas conceded the PDCA "has not yielded the expected results" 2.
The 18 June vote is the first institutional return on a pivot that began months ago. The opposition's campaign migrated to Brussels , after the US Senate route stalled in April . Parliament has now escalated; the Council has not moved. The escalation is diplomatic on paper, not in effect, because the binding instrument sits with the member states, and they have opened no track.
