State Rep. Eddy Gonzalez has scored the Holy Grail of 305 endorsements in his bid for Miami-Dade Property Appraiser — the backing of none other than Sen. Marco Rubio, a one-time VP hopeful.
In what may also be the first time a U.S. Senator stumps for a Property Appraiser candidate, several people told Ladra they had gotten robocalls Rubio’s recorded voice Tuesday, just as the Miami-Dade Elections Department mailed out absentee ballots. The senator told them to vote for Gonzalez, who is the most unqualified candidate for the job, was implicated in the absentee ballot fraud in Hialeah and has violated residency requirements for the past two years while serving in the House in a redrawn district.
Read related story: State Rep. Eddy Gonzalez lives, works outside his district
Oh, no, Marco! Say it ain’t so!
Gonzalez is running against former Property Appraiser Pedro Garcia after the two got the highest number of votes in the August primary. But even though Gonzalez spent twice as much money, he still came in 10 points behind Garcia, who got 35% of the vote.
Rubio’s endorsement, Ladra guesses, is an attempt to close that gap. Rubio has ten times the charisma as “Here Comes Hialeah” — and probably even more countywide appeal.
The robocall rang on Tuesday, the same day the Miami-Dade Elections Department mailed out absentee ballots.
That may be why his endorsement is also pitched in a TV ad that is doing high rotation on Mira TV and in which former candidate Alex Dominguez — who came in number four in a five-man race — also backs Gonzalez.
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Ladra thought for sure that was one of the signs of the apocalypse. I mean, Dominguez was a big critic of Gonzalez and his AB machinery and he has always seemed like one of the good guys.
But he told Ladra he didn’t have an alternative.
“There are only two choices. There’s Eddy and there’s Pedro,” he said Thursday. “And Pedro doesn’t want to make any changes.”
Dominguez said he met with both men and that Gonzalez wants to make the property appraiser’s office independent of the county and admitted that there needed to be more Homestead exemption fraud investigations — which were two of the big items in Dominguez’s platform.
“I don’t want things to stay the same. If I supported Pedro, I would not have run,” said Dominguez, referring to his third race after losing bids for State Rep in 2012 and Miami city commissioner in 2013.