The deadline was noon Monday for those who want to be considered for a potential appointment to the Miami-Dade Commission in District 6, where Kevin Marino Cabrera sat until he resigned last week to be the new U.S. Ambassador to Panama.
But everyone says the fix is in.
West Miami Vice Mayor Natalie Milian Orbis is the favorite for the post, which could be a two-year-plus appointment and will give whoever gets it ample advantage in the next election, which will be in 2026 if a special election is not called. Milian Orbis is the wife of Cabrera’s chief of staff, Manuel Orbis, who would likely have to get a different position at the county resigned his position last week after his boss was confirmed by Congress.
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Other rumored wannabes included State Sen. Bryan Avila, West Miami Mayor Eric Diaz-Padron and an unknown named Francisco Petrirena, who is the director of the city of Miami’s government relations department.
But Milian Orbis — in a photo with Cabrera here during Dade Days in Tallahassee earlier this month — is the only one who has made her intentions public.
Last week, shortly after Cabrera’s resignation was effective, Commission Chairman Anthony Rodriguez had the commission auditor establish a process for District 6 residents to apply for consideration. Even before he did that, on the same day (April 14), Milian Orbis filed paperwork about opening a campaign account for the commission seat race.
According to her bio on the city’s website, Milian Orbis began her public service career 20 years ago as an executive administrator at the Cuban-American Association of Civil Engineers before she went to the county where she worked at a number of commission offices through roles such as commission aide, legislative assistant, and legislative director with former commissioners Joe Martinez, Rebeca Sosa and Juan C. Zapata.
If Milian Orbis — or anyone, for that matter — wanted to be considered for an appointment, the individual had to fill out an application that basically consists of an oath and proof of residency. That’s it. They could have also submitted a resume and a video or audio file — two minutes max. But it wasn’t required.
Ladra thinks there should also be a financial disclosure form like there is for regular candidates.
The application period closed at noon Monday. Submissions will be reviewed and considered at the Tuesday, May 6 county commission meeting. So why such a short window? Less than a week.
Read related: Kevin Cabrera tapped as Panama ambassador; so who will replace him?
This could be a second chance for former Coral Gables Commissioner Jorge Fors, who got 39% of the vote in 2022. Ladra doesn’t even know if he wants it. But he is a no-brainer, seeing as how 20,319 people in the district did vote for him. That is something that the commission could argue legitimately. They would not be choosing the appointment. The people did.
Of course, it would be even better to have a special election. But it looks like Rodriguez may want to appoint someone in the meantime, anyway.
“District 6 deserves representation in the most expeditious manner possible,” the chairman said in a statement. “There are too many critical conversations, decisions, and votes that need to be made in the coming weeks and months for the Commission to create a process that will leave our body – and the people of District 6 – without a voice and advocate.”