Six of the 13 candidates in the Nov. 4 Miami mayoral race will face off on stage at the Hyatt Regency downtown for a real, bonafide debate starting at 7 p.m. Tuesday.
They are: Miami Commissioner Joe Carollo, former Commissioner Alex Díaz de la Portilla, former City Manager Emilio Gonzalez, Miami-Dade Commissioner Eileen Higgins, former Miami Commissioner Ken Russell and former Miami-Dade Commissioner Xavier Suarez, the first Cuban-born mayor of Miami in 1985, wanting a comeback 40 years later.
For those of us who are watching from home — it will be broadcast live on CBS News Miami — there’s something we can do to make it more, um, soportable. This is the first Political Cortadito-sanctioned drinking game and everyone is urged to be responsible and stay put. Don’t pull a Pepe Diaz and get arrested for DUI.
Read related: Miami mayoral hopefuls face off — but only the “top six” make debate cut
Since there are a few expected quips, zingers and BS lines to come out of the candidates’ mouths Tuesday night, why don’t we play along? The rules are real simple. Take a bottle of your choice of alcohol. And then follow these instructions, carefully.
Take a sip or a shot when:

Joe Carollo interrupts someone before they finish their sentence.
Alex Díaz de la Portilla blames the media, the feds, or “political enemies.”
Emilio González says “manager” or “efficient government.”
Eileen Higgins mentions transparency or accountability.
Ken Russell tries to play the peacemaker.
Xavier Suárez references his experience or calls back to the “old days.”

Take two sips or two shots when:

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On the same day that Miami Commissioner Joe Carollo filed the initial paperwork to run in the Miami mayoral race, the X account of former City Manager Emilio González, who is also running for mayor, was temporarily suspended. That can’t be a coincidence.
Gonzalez is the number one enemy on Carollo’s morning radio show. On Friday, the retired colonel — who sued the city after they cancelled the November elections — called it “cancel culture,” but Ladra would call it campaign interference.
According to González, the takedown wasn’t because of anything he or his staff actually posted — no, señor — but because “political rivals” supposedly coordinated mass complaints to trick the platform into flagging his content.
Read related: In Miami mayoral bid, Emilio Gonzalez goes for the law and order vote
“This comes straight out of the socialist playbook,” González huffed in a statement, hitting that tired old tactic almost better than Carollo does. “First, they tried to cancel this year’s election to deny Miami voters their voice. Now, they’re leaning on big tech censorship and dirty tricks to suppress our Miami First movement.”
“They will not succeed.”
He’s used to challenging the haters. Gonzalez filed a lawsuit against the city after commissioners voted in May to move municipal elections from odd- to even-numbered years to align with state and national elections. The court sided with him, saying the ordinance — which effectively cancelled this year’s election for mayor and commissioner in districts 3 and 5 — was a violation of the city and county charter. An appeals court upheld that decision and refused to hear the case a second time.
Many political observers watching the race say he’s leading because of that — the move to change the elections without voter approval was seen as a power grab and voters didn’t like it. They sort of see him as a hero, a badge he’s going to wear out front as long as he can.
There are potentially 14 candidates in the clusterbunch mayoral race Nov. 4. Nine of them qualified as of Friday afternoon. They include, most notably, Miami-Dade Commissioner Eileen Higgins, former Miami Commissioner Ken Russell, former Miami-Dade Commissioner Xavier Suarez. Another five have until 6 p.m. Saturday to qualify. They include, most notably, Miami Commissioner Joe Carollo and former Miami Commissioner Alex Díaz de la Portilla, who was suspended from office in 2023 after his arrest on public corruption charges that were dropped late last year.
A recent poll has Gonzalez heading into a runoff with Higgins, with Russell in third place.
Read related: Poll has Eileen Higgins in Miami mayoral runoff with Emilio Gonzalez
The Gonzalez campaign insists its “message of reform, accountability, affordability, and putting Miami residents first” is catching fire — so much so that enemies are pulling dirty tricks to try to shut down his social media.
“We will not be intimidated,” González added, vowing to get the account restored and keep hammering away at “the elites, the insiders, and certainly not big tech executives doing the bidding of rival campaigns.”
Of course, no evidence was offered that any of that actually happened. But why waste a perfectly good conspiracy theory when you can blame “corrupt insiders” and “big tech” in the same breath?
The González camp says it’s working with X to get the @emilioformiami campaign account back up. Meanwhile, his posts can be seen at @emiliotgonzalez, where he already posted Friday about his meeting with the local Log Cabin Republicans.

Help Ladra cover the increasingly strange Miami city elections this year. Make a contribution to Political Cortadito today. Thank you for supporting independent, grassroots watchdog journalism.

The post Dirty trick? Miami mayoral candidate Emilio González has X account blocked appeared first on Political Cortadito.

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County commissioner wants to qualify by petition
For everyone still whispering that Miami-Dade Commissioner Eileen Higgins might blink at giving up three safe years on the county dais for a risky run at Miami’s top job — stop. It’s done. There’s no room for doubts now.
Higgins submitted her resignation letter as a county elected, as required by law, effective Nov. 5. Which means she’s officially burned the lifeboats.
“I am deeply humbled and honored by the opportunity to run for Mayor of the City of Miami at a time when our community stands at a crossroads and residents are yearning for meaningful reform and real results,” Higgins wrote in the letter sent Monday to Miami-Dade Clerk of Courts Juan Fernandez-Barquin and Supervisor of Elections Alina Garcia, knowing that it would be quoted in stories like this.
“For nearly eight years, it has been my privilege to serve the residents of Miami-Dade County’s District 5, representing the communities of Miami and Miami Beach,” Higgins wrote. “I am profoundly grateful for the trust and confidence that my constituents have placed in me throughout my service, and I will always treasure the opportunity to have served as their county commissioner.
Read related: Poll has Eileen Higgins in Miami mayoral runoff with Emilio Gonzalez
“While it is with mixed emotions that I resign my post, I do so with immense gratitude for the honor of serving the residents of D District 5,” Higgins added. “I look forward to the opportunity to continue serving the residents of the City of Miami as their next Mayor. I bring with me a proven track record of accomplishments, a deep commitment to our community, and a readiness to deliver real results for all who call Miami home.”
Higgins, who Little Havana seniors lovingly call “La Gringa” since she first ran in 2018, also announced that she will qualify for the Miami mayoral ballot the hard way: by petition. Her campaign turned in more than 3,000 signed petitions, topping the 2,048 needed, and making a big show of “grassroots momentum” in the process.
“Qualifying by petition takes people — volunteers, neighbors, and supporters across Miami — who believe in our vision and are willing to act on it,” Higgins said. “That’s exactly what this campaign represents: a movement of residents determined to restore trust, deliver results, and make Miami work for all of us.”
Translation: She wants voters to see her as the anti-Carollo, the antidote to dysfunction at City Hall. The clean, ethical alternative who actually gets stuff done. Her press shop even mentioned her record on affordable housing, small businesses, transit and Biscayne Bay — all of which sound a lot better than what the circus clowns over on Flagler Street are doing right now.
Read related: Miami-Dade’s Eileen Higgins gets $250K for new Miami mayoral race PAC
But let’s be clear: She is abandoning her constituency three years before the end of her term and during a financial crisis with a looming budget shortfall and the consequences of that (fewer services, more fees), which she is going to vote on in the next couple of months — and then disappear. The county will likely have a special election to replace her — three years is too long for an appointee — which will cost the county more. Work that into your budget, Mayor Daniella Levine Cava.
Still, this is a gamble. Higgins had three more guaranteed years in office as the county commission’s senior member. Now she’s chasing history as Miami’s first woman mayor, with fewer than 75 days to make her case citywide.
The field is crowded. But she’s an immediate favorite. A recent poll indicated that the election, if held today, would end in a runoff between Higgins and former City Manager Emilio González, who has been hailed a hero for saving the election with his lawsuit. Gonzalez sued the city to stop the change, by ordinance, of election dates from odd-numbered to even-numbered years, which would have effectively cancelled this year’s mayoral race. He was the only one who took the challenge to court. But that hasn’t stopped Higgins from fundraising off the court’s decision to find the change unconstitutional because there wasn’t a public vote, as required by city and county charter.
There is a clusterbunch of other hopefuls gunning for the certain runoff that includes former Miami Commissioner Ken Russell and former Miami Commissioner and onetime Miami Mayor Xavier Suarez. Commissioner Joe Carollo and former Commissioner Alex Diaz de la Portilla — who was suspended after his arrest on public corruption charges in 2023 (charges were dropped last year) — have threatened to run.
The others who have indicated they are running are Laura Anderson, Christian Cevallos, Alyssa Crocker, Ijamyn Gray, Michael Hepburn, Max Martinez and June Savage. But qualification doesn’t start until Sept. 5. It ends Sept. 20. And then we’ll really know how crowded this party is.
Higgins, 61, will need more than good government talking points to survive Miami’s trench warfare politics — where money, mailers and whisper campaigns can flip a race overnight.
Read related: Eileen Higgins pressures Sierra Club and Ken Russell resigns as lobbyist
Still, qualifying by petition instead of checkbook is a smart optic. It gives Higgins her “people-powered” storyline and undercuts critics who call her the establishment choice.
“I am proud to say that the community is behind me and I am ready to get to work,” Higgins said in an Instagram post earlier this month.
Now the question becomes: Can she turn that petition energy into votes come November? Or will she be remembered as the commissioner who left a safe seat for a shot at City Hall glory — and came up short?
Stay tuned. Miami loves a political novela, and this one just turned the page.
The post Eileen Higgins officially resigns Miami-Dade seat to run for Miami mayor appeared first on Political Cortadito.

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Half a mil is from candidate’s asset management firm
Even before former City Manager Emilio Gonzalez won his lawsuit against the city of Miami for cancelling this year’s election, the retired Army colonel had raised a little more than $750,000 for his mayoral run between his campaign account and his political action committee, Mission Miami.
His campaign account has raised a modest $69,280, according to the campaign finance reports for the second quarter, through June 30. But his PAC, formed in March and chaired by Tallahassee operative Christian R. Camara, raked in a jaw-dropping $681,055 in just three months. And if you think that came in $20 checks from abuelitas, think again.
El pez gordo here is a Wall Street outfit called RIA R Squared — an investment management firm that primarily serves foreign institutional investors. It’s also where Gonzalez has worked for the last five years after leaving the city manager’s job in 2020 under pressure by the commission, primarily Commissioner Joe Carollo. Gonzalez is a partner at R Squared, which manages approximately $1 billion in assets on a “discretionary basis” — and dropped not one, but two $250,000 checks to Mission Miami in April. That’s half a million bucks right there, gente. Enough to buy two condos in Allapattah. Cash.
There’s also a $15,000 contribution from Timothy Patrick Torline, who is a financial advisor at an R Squared subsidiary. And $1,000 from David Kang, the CEO of that subsidiary.
Read related: Third DCA strikes down Miami election change; November ballot is on
“They believe in me,” Gonzalez told Political Cortadito, adding that he does no sales and his company does no business in the state of Florida. “They simply believe in what I stand for and my vision for the city.”
Gonzalez, who has never run for office or had a political action committee before, is starting from scratch and doesn’t have anybody to shake down like Carollo does. He doesn’t have the power of incumbency like Miami-Dade Commissioner Eileen Higgins, whose PAC raised $250,000 in the same period.
The other big donors to the Gonzalez Mission Miami PAC are:

$30,000 in two checks, for $18K and $12K, from Palmetto Bay’s Roger West, CEO of Pyramids Property Management.
$25,000 from SGD Offices, a Doral company with Max Alvarez as one of its principals.
$25,000 from Peninsula 2705 LLC, a North Miami Beach real estate holding.
$23,000 from the law offices of Miguel Inda-Romero.
$10,000 from the Carlos M. De La Cruz Revocable Trust in Key Biscayne.
$10,000 from Maybe Beach attorney Jay Eric Gould.
$10,000 from Juan “J.C.” Flores, a Tallahassee political operative who has worked for Marco Rubio and Carlos Giménez.
$10,000 from Black River Productions, an audio studio in Doral.

On paper, Gonzalez’s own campaign account looks modest by comparison: about $69,000 raised in Q2 from nearly 146 donors, most of them local. Notable names include:

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A new political action committee for the Eileen Higgins campaign for Miami mayor raised $250,000 in its first quarter, showing heavy support from real estate developers, engineering firms, lobbyists — and a political committee that tried to elect James Reyes to Miami-Dade sheriff.
Ethical Leadership for Miami filed its first paperwork on March 24, a little more than a week before Higgins filed paperwork for the mayoral race in April. Its chairman is Christian Ulvert, Higgins’ campaign manager. The total contributions through the end of June was $250,700. Her mayoral campaign picked up another $88,325, for a total of just under $340K. The reports combined show that Higgins had also spent $132,000 as of June 30.
Read related: Poll has Eileen Higgins in Miami mayoral runoff with Emilio Gonzalez
The top donors to her PAC so far are:

$50,000 through four different entities that gave $12,500 each from the real estate developer Related Companies, will need the county’s green light for its plan to build two towers with affordable and workforce housing, a hotel and shops in front of Jackson Memorial Hospital in the city’s health district.
$40,000 (in three separate contributions) from Miami-Dade Safe & Secure PC, a PAC that Ulvert used last year for the James Reyes campaign for sheriff
$25,000 from pharmaceutical heiress, Coral Gables resident and super blue donor Barbara Stiefel
$15,000 from real estate development firm PWV Group 1 Holdings, LLC, which manages the Miami Worldcenter site
$10,000 from developer Morgan Sirlin, vice president at Adler Development
$10,000 from LSN partners, a heavy hitting lobbying firm headed by Alex Heckler and Michael Llorente
$8,000 from four firms with the same address tied to Terra Development CEO David Martin
$5,000 from Alex Heckler as an individual
$5,000 from lobbyist Manuel “Manny” Prieguez, a former state rep
$5,000 from Alfonso Costa, COO of Falcone Group, which develops and manages mixed use projects

The bulk of expenditures have been $51,000 for consulting, production of campaign materials, outreach and staffing through Ulvert’s firms, $31,980 for direct mail, campaign materials and a digital buy through MDW Communications, or Michael Worley — who also conducted a poll last month — and $17,112 for fundraising and events.
The report also shows a reimbursement of $2,568 to Higgins and Maggie Fernandez, her chief of staff at the county, for airfare and accommodations and transportation for the Democratic Party’s Blue Gala. But it was at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel and Casino, so they could have driven.
There are ten other candidates who have filed paperwork to run for mayor Nov. 4 election, including, most notably, former Miami Commissioner Ken Russell, former City Manager Emilio Gonzalez and former Miami-Dade Commissioner Xavier Suarez. Commissioner Joe Carollo, former Commissioner Alex Diaz de la Portilla — who was arrested in 2023 on public corruption charges that were dropped last year — are both threatening to run but haven’t filed anything And Congressman Carlos Gimenez and Miami-Dade Commission Raquel Regalado are rumored to be interested but playing possum.
Qualifying isn’t over until Sept. 20. But it’s enough a clown car already.

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A poll released by Eileen Higgins‘ own campaign says that the Miami-Dade commissioner is leading the other 10 candidates for Miami mayor by a lot. But there’s no way that anyone can win this clusterbunch election outright. There’s going to be a runoff.
And the only one close to Higgins, according to these numbers, is former City Manager Emilio Gonzalez, who filed the lawsuit that killed the city’s move to change the election to next year and has gotten a lot of free press from it, helping to position himself as the hero that saved democracy in Miami.
Read related: First lawsuit filed to stop city of Miami from cancelling November election
Not everyone believes an internal poll, because, well, the questions may have been written a certain way and it is unlikely to be announced if the candidate’s numbers come out badly. This poll was announced two hours and 23 minutes before the campaign sent out a fundraising email. So, yeah. But a Higgins-Gonzalez face-off is not impossible. Higgins also enjoys free press from her incumbent position as the district 5 county commissioner and scored a 74% in name recognition, highest in the pack.
Higgins clocked in at 36% support — that’s 21 points ahead of González, who’s sitting at 15%.
In the crowded field, Miami Commissioner Joe Carollo — who hasn’t filed any paperwork but is threatening to run — and former Miami-Dade Commissioner Xavier Suarez, who has filed paperwork last month, polled at 11% and 7%, respectively. Both are former mayors with huge amounts of publicity. Former Miami Commissioner Ken Russell got about 12% and the rest of the candidates are either somewhere in the single digits or still introducing themselves to abuela at the bus stop.
Russell, in third place, sees something to celebrate. “When the dynasties aren’t even breaking the top three, we know that Miami is ready for change,” he told Political Cortadito.
Read related: Former Miami Mayor Xavier Suarez to file for crowded city mayoral race
Higgins’ enviable name recognition ranks at 74%, with a net +18 favorability. González and Russell are liked by more people than not, but fewer voters know them. Carollo and Suarez? Well… voters know them all right. Just not in a good way.
“This has rapidly evolved into a two-person race, with Commissioner Higgins in a commanding position,” MDW wrote in the polling memo. We’ll see how “commanding” it looks after the attacks start flying.
The only politicians who rated more favorably than Higgins were Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and President Donald Trump.

The online survey by MDW Communications (read: Michael Worley), which has been retained by Higgins’ political committee, Ethical Leadership for Miami, which raised $250,000 in the last quarter reported (more on that later). It got 511 likely voters to respond between July 27 and Aug. 1. And yes, it included quick bios of all the candidates. (So everyone got a little PR moment.)
The sample, for you demographic nerds, 58% were Hispanic, 22% non-Hispanic white, 16% Black or Caribbean, and 4% “other.” A majority — 66% — were 55 or older.
And while it’s technically a non partisan race, those are ceasing to exist in the post Trump Miami-Dade. In the poll, Democrats accounted for 41% of the respondents, Republicans for 35% and NPAs or no-party voters for 24%. Higgins and Russell are Democrats. Carollo and Gonzalez are Republicans. Suarez is an NPA. A few other rumored Republican contenders — former Miami Commissioner Alex Diaz de la Portilla, Congressman Carlos Gimenez and Miami-Dade Commissioner Raquel Regalado — were not included in the poll. Possibly because the rumors are not likely to play out.
The qualifying deadline is Sept. 20.
Read related: Courts killed Miami commission’s election shuffle, but city wants a do-over
The poll also asked about two hot issues:

On the commission’s boneheaded attempt to push the election to 2026 without asking voters first, which has been ruled unconstitutional by the courts — 79% of respondents opposed the date change, with 69% “strongly” opposed. Only 11% supported it, and 9% didn’t care. That’s a big ol’ “don’t even try that again” from Miami voters.
On the watered down proposal for lifetime term limits — which has a loophole cut for both Suarez and Joe Carollo, whose brother, former Miami Commissioner Frank Carollo, is running for his old seat — 71% said they’ll vote yes, 20% said no, and 9% are still thinking about it. That seems like a sure bet. City Commissioner Damian Pardo, who put it on the ballot, must be proud.

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