In the Miami-Dade District 11 race, campaign finance reports filed this week show that incumbent Commissioner Roberto Gonzalez — appointed in November of 2022 to fill the vacancy created by the arrest of Joe Martinez on public corruption charges — has raised more than 16 times as much as his only opponent so far, a schoolteacher who announced he would run for the seat in late February.
But that’s only if you count his campaign account. When you bring his political action committee into it, Gonzalez has raised more than three quarter of a million dollars since January — so it’s 117 times what’s been collected by Bryan Paz-Hernandez, who has only been campaigning for five weeks.
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Recently suspended $2.5 billion bond is still an issue
A political action committee supporting Miami Lakes Mayor Manny Cid in his bid to become the next Miami-Dade Mayor has launched two new web videos blasting Daniella Levine Cava‘s track record and baptizing her with a new nickname.
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The KFHA will host a community meeting Tuesday
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Posted by Admin on Apr 7, 2024 in Lifeproof | 0 comments
Embracing a Life Without Social Media: Reclaiming Your Time, Focus, and Authentic Connections Embracing a Life Without Social Media: Reclaiming Your Time, Focus, and Authentic Connections The Unseen Benefits of Disconnecting Transforming Relationships and Social Interactions Building Deeper Connections Community Engagement Strategies for Thriving Without Social Media Replacing Screens with Experiences Developing a Mindful Media…
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The “undersigned residents of Coral Gables” who supposedly penned the letter to the editor supporting Coral Gables Mayor Vince Lago and urging against his recall are a bunch of developers and other Lago lackeys, some with financial interests in the City Beautiful.
The content of the letter (which was probably really written by campaign consultant Jesse Manzano) is laughable enough already without the motivated signatures. It’s also strange that it was published in The Miami Herald Tuesday, a full week after it was first published in Community Newspapers (only the latter printed the names of all 49 “undersigned residents”). That almost never happens.
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