Miami mayoral race keeps getting more interesting with new candidates, polls

Miami mayoral race keeps getting more interesting with new candidates, polls
  • Sumo

The Miami mayoral race this November is getting interesting — and we don’t just mean the announcement this week that former Miami City Commissioner Emilio Gonzalez has formally filed to run, making good on rumors that he’s helped spread since early last year.

Who’s next? Former Miami Mayor and county commissioner Xavier Suarez, father of the actual incumbent Mayor Francis Suarez? Or Miami-Dade Commissioner Raquel Regalado?

All three of them were on a SurveyMonkey poll texted to Miami voters last week asking them to provide first choice, second choice and third choice options. So were Miami-Dade Commissioner Eileen Higgins and former Miami Commissioner Ken Russell, who had already filed. Also on the list: Current Miami Commissioner Joe Carollo and former Miami Commissioner Alex Diaz de la Portilla, who was suspended after his 2023 arrest on public corruption charges related to the giveaway of a public park that were later dropped by the Broward State Attorney’s Office, neither of whom have yet filed any paperwork but both of whom have repeatedly and widely threatened to run.

But there were only four runoff scenarios presented in the version of the poll that Ladra saw: Carollo vs. Regalado or Higgins vs. Regalado or Carollo vs. Higgins or Carollo vs. Diaz de la Portilla. Carollo being in three out of four potential second rounds could be an ominous sign.

Or it could be his poll. Nobody has taken responsibility.

Read related: Long list of potential 2025 Miami mayoral candidates starts to take form

Diaz de la Portilla seems to be campaigning. His Instagram has photos of him talking with constituents — like knocking on doors? — and echoing the extreme political line of President Donald Trump and his minions, clearly positioning himself early on as the Trump candidate. Why not? He’s got that same “persecuted by the Democrat machine” thing going.

On Tuesday night, Diaz de la Portilla posted a photo of him and newly-reelected Coral Gables Mayor Vince Lago at Lago’s victory party on Miracle Mile.

“Congratulations to my friend Vince Lago on his re-election as Mayor of the City of Coral Gables! Last night, the residents of the City Beautiful won by choosing to reelect a true public servant, who now has a mandate to continue to serve his constituents with a true vision for the future and leadership,” Diaz de la Portilla posted on his Instagram.

ADLP went to Lago’s 2021 party, too.

Carollo is competing for that Trump cheerleader role in the race on his weekday morning radio show (more on that later), where he’s also already attacking Higgins. Ladra can’t wait to hear what he has to say about Gonzalez. But he may have a problem if Commissioner Damian Pardo gets his way Thursday with a proposed referendum that would provide for lifetime term limits. If it passes, Carollo, who has already served two terms as mayor, would be ineligible to run.

Pardo has said that he is not targeting Crazy Joe with the proposed amendment. But it would only apply to Carollo, who was mayor WHEN WHEN, and Suarez, who was mayor from 1985 to 1993 and again from 1997 to 1998 — thought that last term was cut short by absentee ballot fraud so X might say he didn’t really serve two full terms.

Read related: Voters in Miami may get to strengthen term limits and ban political retreads

Russell was on NBC6’s Impact with Jackie Nespral last weekend and said he supported Pardo’s proposed referendum.

“We keep seeing the same people coming back and getting reelected. Half the people I served with there have mugshots. But they continue to get re-elected, and family members and its a lot of these names that we know,” Russell said. “I’m not attacking them personally. I want a system that attracts new blood for the future of Miami to have the potential it has.

“Once the system of government changes, it’s going to attract better talent to run for office.”

Russell, who said he had already raised more than $100,000, said he has really enjoyed his time off since leaving office in 2023 (he resigned to run for Congress) and did not intend to return to government. “I’m telling you, it sucks you back in,” he told Nespral. “There is so much going wrong with the city of Miami. As great as the city is, it’s governance is horrible.

“It’s embarrassing. We all see it on the news every day. The pay to play is alive and well. The corruption in terms of lawsuits. Tens of thousands of dollars have been spent defending the unethical behavior of commissioners,” said Russell, who is an avid TikToker.

He has said that as mayor, he would actually show up to commission meetings and serve as chair of the commission. He would also advance a change to expand the commission from five to at least seven members and work to reverse or mitigate the commission vote made in February at the behest of Mayor Francis Suarez to let the developers of the Miami Freedom Park real estate complex and soccer stadium off the hook for funding $10 million in public parks throughout the city.

Read related: Miami Freedom Park gets its full $20 million back for 58-acre public park

“Over 100 acres of new parks that were to be funded in the city are now being undone… If I’m in office, this is a very easy fix. These parks can be funded by the folks that need to pay for them. They can and they will,” said Russell, who filed bar complaints against Suarez and former City Attorney Victoria “Vicky” Mendez after the vote to give the developers back the $10 mil. They were dismissed immediately.

Gonzalez, a former director for U.S. Immigrations and Citizenship Services, was on WPLG’s This Week in South Florida in February, talking about national immigration issues. He served as city manager from 2018 to early 2020, when he resigned amid a political battle with the City Commission and accusations from Carollo that he had abused his position to avoid code enforcement violations on his home deck. An ethics investigation later found that Gonzalez committed no wrongdoing.

Carollo also tried to fire Gonzalez in 2019. And Russell was one of the no votes that thwarted it.

Commissioner Higgins posted a campaign launch video that starts with news footage of the corruption that’s been swirling around Miami City Hall for years.

Read related: Miami-Dade Commissioner Eileen Higgins could join Miami Mayor’s race

“We’ve had enough. Families are struggling. Businesses can’t thrive. When City Hall is filled with corruption, nothing gets done
for the people,” Higgins says in the 81-second video, where she speaks a little bit of Spanish, too.

“I’m running for mayor to get things done,” La Gringa says. “I’ve delivered for your as your county commissioner,” she said, citing her experience in affordable housing, helping small businesses and creating and protecting green spaces. “Miami, now I’m ready to go to work for you.”

She ends the video with a reminder of how she was first elected to the county commission in an upset against Zoraida Barreiro, wife of former Miami-Dade Commissioner Bruno Barreiro, when La Gringa was relatively unknown. Alex Diaz de la Portilla was in that race, too, but didn’t make the runoff.

“In 2018, we beat the odds. With your support we’ll do it again,” Higgins says. “Miami, this is our time. Nuestro momento.”