While there is only one candidate declared to be running for Miami commission, in District 5, there are many potential and rumored hopefuls — and most of them, if not all, are known entities in the community.
Attorney Alfie Leon, who almost beat Joe Carollo in 2017 for the District 3 seat (came within 252 votes) — and then sued him on residency status because he had long lived in D2’s Coconut Grove — told Political Cortadito in October that he was “planning on running again” and would “make an announcement soon.” Tick, tock, Alfie.
Two other 2017 candidates who lost in District 4 are said to be eyeing a second chance, should Manolo Reyes actually run for mayor as he has threatened to do: Urban planner Ralph Rosado, who got 36% of the vote against Reyes, who won with 58%, and Denise Galvez Turros, a marketing boutique owner who works with the Little Havana businessmen that sued Carollo, who only got 7%. Rosado has served on the Friends of The Underline board of directors. Galvez has served on the city’s Historic and Environmental Preservation Board.
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Both make good candidates but venture capitalist Rafael “Ralph” Cabrera, president-elect of the Latin Builders Association, is apparently the heir apparent with Reyes’ blessing. That is, if he runs for mayor, after all.
Las malas lenguas say that Brenda Betancourt is eyeing the District 3 seat. She is the president of the Little Havana Neighborhood Association, a frequent speaker at commission meetings — where she defends Carollo — and the wife of Miguel Soliman, who ran unsuccessfully against Carollo in both 2017 ad 2020. He got almost 6% of the vote in 2017, with 357 ballots cast in his favor, but did worse in 2021, with less than 5% of the vote and 266 votes.
The most interesting rumored candidate, so far, is Patrick Range, the grandson of Mary Athelie Range — a Bahamian American civil rights activist and the first black elected to the city commission in 1965 — who is reportedly looking at a run in District 5 against Chairwoman Christine King.
There is a park ad a stretch of Biscayne Boulevard named after Athalie Range, who was appointed by then Mayor Robert King High to replace a commissioner who resigned and went on to win re-election twice. In 1971, she was appointed Secretary of the Florida Department of Community Affairs by Gov. Reubin Askew. She became the first African-American since Reconstruction and the first woman ever to head a state agency in Florida. In other words, she is Black Miami royalty.
Prince Patrick Range is an attorney who once worked for former Miami Commissioner Johnny Winton and now helps run the family funeral home.
He was more recently chair of the Virginia Key Trust Board and has been upset with King — who called voters “mean and miserable” — since she led the dismantling of the volunteer group that dedicated their time and efforts to ensure the beach, park and site of a future museum of Black history in Miami would be protected, and replaced it basically with the city commission.
He discussed it with WPLG’s Glenna Milberg last year. “Nobody has yet to explain why it was necessary to remove the prior board and to do so within the swift nature that we were removed,” Range told her. “This is with little explanation and no plan in place for how they would move forward. That just seems very shortsighted to me.”
He said that Virginia Beach had been the target of several development plans throughout the years, including hotels, private beach pavilions and other amenities and he seems distrustful of the commission (folks say he’s smart), which has floated housing the homeless in a camp there and also swiped the license of a concessionaire last year without any notice.
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“This is why the trust was created back in 200o, in order to prevent these things from happening,” he said in the Channel 10 interview.
Range should be a real challenge to King, who has been a disappointment to many of her own constituents and has given half a million dollars in city funds to the non-profit she used to work at before she was elected (and where she’ll likely work after she’s voted out). Marion Brown, the one candidate who has filed to run in D5, got just over 10% of the vote in August’s Miami-Dade District 3 race.
The Miami commission and mayoral election is in November. Qualifying is Sept. 5 through Sept. 20. So we can expect more candidates to come up.