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Cuba Dispatch
28MAY

Florida Republicans take credit for EO 14404

2 min read
08:42UTC

Rep. Carlos Giménez (FL-26) issued a 7 May press release endorsing Executive Order 14404 as 'necessary to target the regime's security apparatus'; Mario Díaz-Balart and María Elvira Salazar aligned publicly.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

Florida's three Cuban-American Republicans claimed credit for EO 14404 despite Treasury never answering their February letter.

Representative Carlos Giménez (R-FL-26) issued a 7 May 2026 press release endorsing Executive Order 14404, the new Cuba personal-sanctions order. "Sanctions are necessary to target the regime's security apparatus," Giménez stated, adding: "The days of impunity are over." Representatives Mario Díaz-Balart (FL-25) and María Elvira Salazar (FL-27), the two other Cuban-American Republicans in the Florida delegation, aligned publicly with the endorsement.

Giménez's public posture signals satisfaction with the EO 14404 direction. It comes after a 96-day silence from Treasury on the delegation's 11 February 2026 letter , which demanded comprehensive revocation of every Cuba-related OFAC general licence. Treasury never responded in writing. EO 14404 does not revoke the existing CACR general licences; the order adds the personal-sanctions register alongside them. The Florida delegation has chosen to claim the new order as a victory rather than press the unanswered revocation demand.

Giménez, Díaz-Balart and Salazar each represent Miami-area districts with large Cuban-American constituencies and face mid-term scrutiny in 2026. EO 14404 stands as the most visible Cuba-policy action of the Trump administration's second term. Crediting the order, even when it falls short of the delegation's original demand, banks a tangible legislative-adjacent win.

Giménez's endorsement also eases congressional pressure for further OFAC licence revocations. The Florida delegation's silence on residual Cuba licences leaves Treasury with administrative space to add EO 14404 designations at its own pace, without congressional letter campaigns forcing the timetable.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

**Carlos Giménez**, **Mario Díaz-Balart** and **María Elvira Salazar** are the three Cuban-American Republicans representing congressional districts in and around Miami. On 7 May, the day before the new sanctions architecture was finalised, they put out a press release endorsing the new Cuba executive order **EO 14404**. Giménez led the statement; the other two backed it within hours. This matters because the three of them are the loudest Cuba-policy voices in the Republican House caucus. Their endorsement converts an executive order, which the President can revoke on his own, into a political position the White House cannot walk back without provoking three of its own Florida House members. The previous letter the trio sent on 11 February (ID:2446) had received no Treasury response for 96 days. **EO 14404** answers that letter, and **Giménez**, **Díaz-Balart** and **Salazar** have publicly claimed the response.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The synchronised three-member endorsement reflects the delegation's policy machinery rather than three independent reactions. **Carlos Giménez**'s former chief of staff **Iliana Calzadilla** runs informal coordination across the three offices; Calzadilla and **Daniel García-Cardentey** (Salazar's senior policy aide) have run synchronised press operations on Cuba files since 2023. **Calzadilla**'s same-day timing on 7 May is the operational tell.

Electoral arithmetic drives the second cause. Florida's 26th, 27th and 25th districts each have Cuban-American voter registration above 38%. The 2024 midterm cycle's primary calendar requires public Cuba-policy positions by August 2026 for these incumbents. EO 14404 endorsement is the cheapest available position-marking instrument, regardless of operational substance.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Synchronised endorsement constrains administration walk-back of EO 14404 designations through 2026 midterm cycle.

  • Precedent

    Public House Republican endorsement of an executive order before any designations test it locks in delegation political ownership of subsequent enforcement outcomes.

First Reported In

Update #4 · Diesel adrift, grid splits, Rubio at Vatican

Office of Representative Carlos Giménez· 18 May 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Florida Republicans take credit for EO 14404
The Cuban-American Florida delegation has shifted from pressure to credit-taking, even though its February licence-revocation demand still has no Treasury response.
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