Rollback of commission salary increases also coming
What happened in Coral Gables Tuesday has been described by some as a “red wave.” While the biannual city election is officially non partisan, it has increasingly become so in nature and some have openly feared what they call the “MAGAfication” of the City Beautiful.
Mayor Vince Lago, Vice Mayor Rhonda Anderson, and newly-elected Commissioner Richard Lara — who will all be sworn in on Friday — each ran their campaigns on issues that matter to Republicans, namely lowering taxes and reigning in government spending. They also promised to move the elections to November, which will certainly make the elections even more partisan.
There are already the anonymous, venomous online trolls and the frivolous defamation lawsuits, and threats, like in MAGA.
The first thing this new crew might try to do is roll back the salary increases that the commissioners gave themselves in 2023, less than five months after two new commissioners were elected earlier that year. It was a campaign promise hammered by both Lago and Lara. It’s been a thorn in the mayor’s side. All they need is a 3-2 vote, which they have now.
Some people think that they won’t roll the salaries back, that because Lago and Anderson got the raise, too — and won’t tell anyone what “charity” they donated it to — they won’t give it up so easy now. But that’s gonna be awkward after everything they said during the campaign.
Read related: Vince Lago scores with Richard Lara’s Coral Gables commission runoff win
Commissioners Melissa Castro and Ariel Fernandez better start making the necessary budget cuts in their personal finances. Get new cars. Or find side jobs, like Lago has.
The new majority will also likely, and rather quickly, push to move the elections from April to November. They can either move it themselves — because the charter doesn’t seem to be clear on that — or vote to put it on the ballot. If they are truly for “accountability and transparency,” as they claim, they will do the latter .
Fernandez said his concern with the November election is that it will make the local races even more partisan. “It takes away the focus of the local issues,” he told Political Cortadito.
But Lara said moving the elections to November was among his priorities in an email sent Wednesday morning, thanking voters for their support and pledging to deliver on the promises he made during the campaign.
“I’m proud to share that — thanks to you — we won,” Lara wrote. “With the highest run-off election turnout in over five years, Coral Gables residents sent a clear message: we are ready for civility, for accountability, and for a commission that puts residents first.
“This victory is not just mine — it belongs to all of us who believe in honest leadership and a better future for our City Beautiful.”
He said that his mandate is to roll back the salary increases, move elections to November, and put tax dollars back into the community — all Lago issues that were key to his election.
Tom Wells, who lost the runoff with 45% of the vote Tuesday, send his own email thanking supporters and saying that the city can do other things to generate more voter participation, before they consider moving the election a November ballot. The trolleys could add a stop at the library during early voting days (why doesn’t it stop at the library all the time?), and there could be electronic signage to announce voting dates. Wells, who got campaign support from the Coral Gables Democratic Club, also says candidates should be allowed to purchase booths at the Farmers Market events and have city-sponsored forums for residents to meet the candidates.
“I would like the City to encourage voter engagement for April elections before bundling our local election with so many other elections in November like the City of Miami,” Wells said. “Coral Gables is so important that we deserve to be the only issue on the ballot as we have done for the last 100 years.”
Lara also said in his email that he would fight overdevelopment, “restore transparency and public trust,” “end dysfunction and chaos at City Hall,” and focus on “real results, not political theater.”
For those things, Ladra suggests he talk to his buddy, Vince.
Read related: Coral Gables commission considers moving elections to November
Lago is going to be setting up his priorities now that he has a clear path for his agenda with the majority on the vote. But that means he is also going to be under additional pressure, said Fernandez, who came into office as part of a minority and says that more than 90% of the commission votes are unanimous, anyway.
“Now, he’s in the driver’s seat, so he can’t blame somebody else for issues,” Fernandez said. “He’s got to deliver results.”
The induction ceremony begins at 11:30 a.m. Friday in the community meeting room of the Coral Gables Police and Fire Headquarters, 2151 Salzedo St. There will be a reception immediately after at the Bachour Coral Gables Courtyard. Ladra is not sure if it is open to the public. City spokeswoman Martha Pantin did not get back to Political Cortadito with the answer Wednesday, which was the deadline to RSVP anyway.
The first meeting of the new Coral Gables commission will be on May 20.
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The post Coral Gables electeds to be sworn in, will push for November elections appeared first on Political Cortadito.
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Loyal readers of Political Cortadito have come to expect our “winners and losers” post in the wake of every local election, highlighting those people and entities who scored or got hammered, other than the candidates.
After the April 8 re-election in Coral Gables of Mayor Vince Lago and Vice Mayor Rhonda Anderson, there were already some obvious winners and losers. But it was only safe to wait until after the runoff, where Lago got his handpicked candidate, Richard Lara, over the finish line, to be sure. And thorough.
Read related: Vince Lago scores with Richard Lara’s Coral Gables commission runoff win
So, without any further blah, blah, blah, the winners and losers from this year’s biannual Coral Gables election are:
WINNERS
Jesse Manzano and Brian Goldmeier, Lago’s campaign manager and professional fundraiser. These two have another notch on their belt and a fatter bank account to show for it. Manzano overcame some heavy negatives with consistent messaging about how bad Commissioner Kirk Menendez would be because of the decisions he’s made in the past (raises, city managers, November vote, etc.). It was brilliant. Evil, but brilliant. Goldmeier is just richer.
The sick anonymous trolls who like to attack on Lago’s behalf with vulgar language and inappropriate images on social media. They have been having a field day.
Developers, real estate investors and construction industry people who donated to the Lago and Lara campaigns like it was buying precious eggs, and now stand to benefit from a consolidated 3-2 vote that seems development friendly.
Chelsea Granell, the mayor’s chief of staff of none, who gets to keep her job and her $91,165 annual salary plus benefits.
Former Miami Commissioner Alex Diaz de la Portilla, a Lago supporter, who is likely to tell people that he was the one who got the mayor and his slate elected. Some may have heard he had breakfast recently with Manzano, so they’ll believe it.
LOSERS
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Newly-elected Coral Gables Commissioner Richard Lara, who won a runoff Tuesday against attorney Tom Wells, isn’t the only one who is celebrating his victory. Mayor Vince Lago, who handpicked Lara and supported him throughout, wins back his majority on the city commission — meaning that he’ll get to move his agenda forward.
It also means there is going to be hell to pay for anyone who opposed him.
Lara beat Wells with a solid 10-point lead, just over 55% of the vote, an 847-vote difference, according to the Miami-Dade Elections Department’s published results. The general counsel for Spanish Broadcasting Systems led in all three categories — absentee or vote-by-mail ballots, early voting and Election Day, although the last was a smaller gap (less than 100 votes).
We have to wonder if one of those votes was his own, seeing as how Lara hadn’t voted in the Gables city elections since 1999 before this year.
Turnout was a little more than 23%, which is lower than Election Day’s 29% but higher than some expected for a runoff after Easter Sunday.
Read related: Coral Gables mayor’s power hinges on runoff — Richard Lara vs Tom Wells
Lara was always the favorite after coming in with 47% in the first round April 8. Wells got 39% and lobbyist Claudia Miro, who later endorsed Lara, came in with 13%, which forced the runoff. Lago also won solidly April 8 and so did Vice Mayor Rhonda Anderson, who also endorsed Lara.
Wells got the endorsement of The Miami Herald, which did him as good as it did Claudia Miro in the first round, and the Coral Gables Neighborhood Association, which did him as good as it did Felix Pardo, who lost against Anderson, and Commissioner Kirk Menendez, who lost against Lago.
This last victory Tuesday will change the dynamics on the commission, giving Lago the third vote he needs to get whatever he wants done. The mayor had been on the losing side of several 3-2 votes since shortly after the 2023 victories of commissioners Melissa Castro and Ariel Fernandez, who might have been crying Tuesday night, who were elected against Lago’s wishes and money. The mayor’s behavior towards the two newbies pushed Menendez a former Lago ally who lost his mayoral bid earlier this month, to quickly become a swing vote for them and against Lago.
Lara was always intended to restore Lago’s third vote. He announced his run for office during public comments at a commission meeting in February of last year, way before Menendez moved to the mayoral race. In fact, las malas lenguas say he switched because a poll showed Lara was a threat to Menendez on the salary and city manager issues, which were both Lago’s and Lara’s platform. Kirk decided he could do better against Lago, who certainly has his share of detractors and he could draw on that.
Meanwhile, Lara was an unknown. But he had many of the mayor’s same supporters flood his campaign account with almost $272,000, including $103,000 in just eight days after the first round — and Lago’s political action committee, Coral Gables First, which sent text messages and mailers to voters. Lara had more of everything — more mailers, more phone banking, more people knocking on doors.
Read related: Coral Gables election choice is a Vince Lago yes vote or an independent voice
That’s iffy right there. For a mayor to be so invested in a commission candidate’s victory. Lago is not only going to be insoportable, he’s also going to be unstoppable. Look for things like the mobility hub and the annexation of Little Gables to rear their ugly heads again. Maybe not immediately, but eventually.
Wells self funded his campaign, to the tune of about $19,000, and just did not have enough to counter the hammering he got from Lago, er, Lara (read: both), which included 11th hour whisper campaigns about Wells traveling to a golf tournament in Georgia (he didn’t) and some backroom deal to hire Menendez as the city a manager (laughable).
Wells emailed Lara a concession message late Tuesday, after the results were in.
“Congratulations on winning the Coral Gables Commissioner Group III seat,” Wells told him. “I wish you luck in navigating the issues of serving the City as an elected official and look forward to your campaign promise of voting independently and restoring civility and transparency as to each issue for the benefit of Coral Gables.”
But somehow, Ladra doubts it. Because he would have to be willing to, sometimes, vote against his benefactor.
The post Vince Lago scores with Richard Lara’s Coral Gables commission runoff win appeared first on Political Cortadito.
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In a span of eight days after the Coral Gables election earlier this month and before the runoff in Commission Group 3 Tuesday, attorney candidate Richard Lara — who hasn’t voted in the city since 1999 — raised more than $102,800. Eight days!
That is a huge injection into his campaign account, which totals almost $272,000 as of April 17, according to the latest campaign finance reports, and further impacts this already lopsided race. It’s the largest amount in one single report since he began fundraising last year. The second largest is his first report of $45,000 — but that was over the course of three months.
It’s not only because Lara came in with pole position in the first round — getting 47% to attorney Tom Wells‘ 39% — but also because he has the support of both Mayor Vince Lago and Vice Mayor Rhonda Anderson, who won his re-election handily. Many of the contributions between April 9 and April 17 are real estate or development related, from lobbyists (Lago’s brother Carlos Lago gave $1,000) or Lago loyalists, like former commissioners Frank Quesada and Wayne “Chip” Withers, as well as attorney and University of Miami booster John Ruiz, whose LifeWallet company was under a Department of Justice investigation last year for fraud.
Included in the contributions were $5,000 from developer Armando Codina, $5,000 from developer Tom Cabrerizo and $3,000 from three of the late Sergio Pino‘s companies that now belong to his estranged wife, Tatiana Pino.
Read related: Coral Gables mayor’s power hinges on runoff — Richard Lara vs Tom Wells
And Lara is spending it faster than he gets it, with $145,000 going just in one April 17 check to consultant Alex Miranda for advertising. That’s more than half the $245,250 Lara has spent in total. It may include the cost of several mailers he has sent out to voters, including one with an endorsement from his wife and a couple that attack Wells on the same exact arguments that Lago used to attack Commissioner Kirk Menendez, who lost his mayoral challenge with 55% of the vote April 8.
Lara also spent $3,000 to rent the Coral Gables museum for his watch party event and reimbursed himself $95.88 for an email expense.
That’s just from Lara’s campaign account. Mayor Lago is also using his political action committee, Coral Gables First, to benefit his handpicked yes vote, paying for mailers and text messages. Lago has a lot riding on this runoff.
Wells is the only thing standing between Vince Lago and anything he wants. He is the last defense against a new mayoral majority that will revisit the annexation of Little Gables, roll back the salary increases for commissioners, try to move the election to November and lower taxes for their developer friends, who will feel empowered with the Lago slate. Wells is independent, in the sense that he has gone against both the mayor and the other faction on the dais, favoring a national search for a new city manager rather than an on-the-spot appointment. He is not beholder to anybody.
Read related: Coral Gables election choice is a Vince Lago yes vote or an independent voice
While he has the endorsement of The Miami Herald and Coral Gables United, the political branch of the Coral Gables Neighbors Association, Wells is woefully underfunded in comparison, paying for everything out of his own pocket to the tune of $19,000, so far.
He’s that committed to the City Beautiful. He’s willing to put his own skin in the game.
Richard Lara hasn’t even voted in the city since 1999. He is simply a puppet for the mayor to get his majority back and move his agenda along without any checks and balances.
Turnout has been lower for the runoff, with almost 13.5% of the registered 34,017 voters in the Gables. The turnout for the first round was almost 30%. Of the 4,580 votes cast as of Sunday the end of early voting Sunday night, more than half, or 2,789, are absentee or vote-by-mail ballots. On Saturday, 1,155 people voted early. On Sunday, it was 636.
But that was Easter Sunday so it’s not as bad as it could have been.
Voters have one more day — Election Day on Tuesday. There are 14 polling locations open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
And then we will either have two years of Vince Lago running roughshod over everyone and doing whatever he wants, or two years of a more balanced and civilized commission where no one person has all the power.
The post Richard Lara pulls in $103K for Coral Gables runoff Tuesday vs Tom Wells appeared first on Political Cortadito.
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The Coral Gables election is almost over with early voting this weekend for the runoff coming Tuesday. The choice is between two attorneys: Richard Lara, general counsel for Spanish Broadcasting Systems, and the handpicked candidate, groomed by Mayor Vince Lago — who was just solidly re-elected — and Tom Wells, a member of the city’s charter advisory board who has spoken at the commission meeting 14 times in the last several months and is likely to be more independent.
Much more independent.
In fact, many of the mailers for Lara that Gables voters are getting in their mailbox almost every day come from Lago’s political action committee, Coral Gables First. Lago needs Lara desperately if he is going to move his agenda — which would include annexing Little Gables and building a multi-million dollar mobility hub — forward. That’s all Lara is there for — to give the mayor back the majority he lost shortly after Commissioners Melissa Castro and Ariel Fernandez beat his candidates in 2023.
Lara won’t be independent. He can’t be. Lago will have put him there for a purpose. His will have to be loyal and complicit.
Read related: Coral Gables mayor’s power hinges on runoff — Richard Lara vs Tom Wells
Wells was a de facto member of the losing slate in the first round this election, but only because the same people who supported him supported Commissioner Kirk Menendez for mayor and architect Felix Pardo for commission against Vice Mayor Rhonda Anderson. He is the anti-Lago candidate inasmuch as he is not Lara, the decidedly pro-Lago candidate. But he has spoken against measures taken by the other faction: Menendez, Castro and Fernandez.
So he is nobody’s go-to pocket vote, like Lara would be. In fact, he would be a much needed swing vote on that dais, able to go whichever way the wind blows best for residents.
Wells sent an email Friday, hours after getting The Miami Herald endorsement, explaining how his campaign had started about restoring civility and now it’s about stopping voting blocks.
“Our five-person commission needs five independent decision makers to address the needs and issues of all neighborhoods,” Wells wrote. “I am independent, and as your next commissioner, will vote independently on each issue in the best interest of you, the residents.”
That independence is also reflected in the fact that he is self-financing his campaign. He is not taking any special interest money. In the end, and ironically, that could be what ends him. No money to counter the messages that the other side — including Lago’s PAC — is hammering voters with.
At last count, through April 3, Lara raised more than $169,000, according to the most recent campaign finance report, and still had about $75K in the bank. Wells has spent less than half of that, or more than $36,000 of his own money, according to his reports. At some point, that’s going to hurt. Especially if it doesn’t make a difference.
Lara’s messaging has stayed pretty consistent with Lago’s platform. Even though it’s harder to attack Wells on them because he is not an elected already, like Menendez, they still have. Wells won’t immediately rescind the salary increases for the mayor and commissioners that Mayor Lago promised to roll back. Lara promises to roll them back also. Not a coincidence.
He also wants to change the election to November from April. And agrees with a tiny cut that would save the average homeowner less than $100 but the big property owners and developments tens of thousands in taxes, and possibly cut services.
Lara sounds like a parrot. Lara the loro. And, if he wins, people better get used to it. Lago is going to be getting an echo from both his left and his right side on the dais. Speaking of which, Anderson, who also won pretty handily April 8, also endorsed El Loro.
Several of the mailers sent out for Lara notes that he is endorsed by “trusted local publications,” citing the Community News and Coral Gables Magazine. Trusted must be a subjective term. At that time, Wells did not have the Herald endorsement, like he has now. The Herald said both candidates were good, but that Wells was simply better prepared. Lara, they suggested, should try joining a city board, if he wants to be involved.
That’s a good one. Because Lara obviously doesn’t want to be involved. He doesn’t even vote. This was all Vinnie’s idea.
Read related: Coral Gables candidate Richard Lara has not voted in the city since 1999
Lara — who, remember, hasn’t voted in a city election in Coral Gables since 1999 — also got the endorsement, as predicted by Political Cortadito, from transit lobbyist Claudia Miro, who lost the first round with only 13.5% of the vote against Lara’s 47% and Wells’ 39%. Many people expected Miro, who shares Lago contributors like former Miami Commissioner Marc Sarnoff — who she used to work for — to endorse Lara. In fact, some of them think she was planted all along to thwart the race. There will be far fewer turnout this Tuesday, April 22, than there was last week. It’s Easter weekend. People are out of town. That could affect the outcome.
It could work in Wells’ favor, if the people who come out to vote are the engaged residents who are already involved and know the truth from the propaganda they’re getting in the mail and on their phones. Lago is not on the ballot, so some people will just forgo the runoff and let whatever happens, happen.
Wells got the Herald endorsement, as noted. But wouldn’t anybody who is swayed by that already be voting for him? And, again, he really doesn’t have the money to get that message out, anyway.
Meanwhile, there is money being spent on smear campaigns that have gotten their way to another blog, citing two sources that say they saw Wells at the Master’s golf tournament last weekend in Augusta, Ga. Even though Wells said he hadn’t gone — though he usually gets tickets comped by one of his clients — and been to Charleston to visit his mother in the hospital, instead.
“Just like anybody else might feel in that position, I did not want to end up having any regrets because I didn’t go,” Wells told Political Cortadito. He flew in the day after the election and flew back two days later, on Friday, to campaign.
Ladra bets the two “sources” that allegedly saw him in Georgia were Lara himself and Lago lackey Nicholas Cabrera, the self-described “prince of Coral Gables” who is serving as Lara’s body man on the campaign (because, surely, Jesse Manzano is running that show).
Other smear campaigns include that he has promised to make Menendez city manager in exchange for his endorsement. First, Menendez hasn’t endorsed Wells and, secondly, he would not really be the best choice from a national search, which is what Wells advocated for when the commission fired former manager Peter Iglesias. He still would go that route if the current city manager were to resign. Wells spoke at a city meeting against the position held by Castro, Fernandez and Menendez on that one — and no, the other two candidates have not endorsed him, either. And, no, Fernandez is not running his campaign.
This all smells like desperation on the part of Lago, er, we mean Lara. Aren’t they super confident they’ll come in ahead?
Wells’ only endorsement has been from Gables Neighbors United, an affiliate of Coral Gables Neighbors Association — an active group of residents focused on fighting overdevelopment — and, now, The Miami Herald. And the only people working on his campaign are his wife, Diane, and some friends. And gratis.
“I think it is wrong to get any elected official to endorse a candidate,” Wells says. “This is up to the residents to choose. Why would an elected official intervene in an election? I know that is what Mayor Lago and Vice-Mayor Anderson have done for Mr. Lara because they are running a slate — and I think it is wrong.
“I am independent. I would appreciate the vote of Commissioners Fernandez and Castro — as well as any other resident — but not their endorsement.”
Read related: Vince Lago, Rhonda Anderson handily coast to re-election in Coral Gables
Sue Kawalerski, the president of Coral Gables Neighbors Association, said that the residents deserve checks and balances on the dais.
“He wants a one-side commission,” Kawalerski said about Lago. “We need a balance of power and the only independent candidate is Tom Wells. He won’t be on one side or another, she said. “He will be on our side.”
Wells has also committed to stop any efforts on the city’s behalf to annex Little Gables, because city voters overwhelmingly rejected the idea on a ballot question last August with 63% of the vote. Gables voters don’t want to absorb the $23 million cost that it would take just over the first five years to bring Little Gables into the City Beautiful fold. Lago, who has been obsessed with this annexation and whose brother used to lobby for the largest property owner in Little Gables, has not made the commitment to let it go. He voted against dropping it last year after the vote, because he said there was low turnout. So he will try again.
Wells also commits to keeping the zoning code intact and not grant exceptions and variances to developers for larger and denser projects that increase traffic and burden other city services.
Ladra and some Gables observers and critics of Lago’s are worried that if Lara wins, that means that there will be no checks and balances on the commission, the mayor will have the power he needs to run over the wishes of residents or business owners he doesn’t like and the temperature on the dais will get even hotter. But developers will be happy.
And so will Lago, who will have free reign for the next two years and be even more insoportable than he is already.
The post Coral Gables election choice is a Vince Lago yes vote or an independent voice appeared first on Political Cortadito.
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In the final three months before his re-election last week, Coral Gables Mayor Vince Lago raised more than $389,000 for his political action committee, Coral Gables First, spending almost $330,000 on direct mail, email, text messaging, digital ads, political consulting, canvassing, polls and fundraising.
These contributions did not become public until two days after the election, in the first quarter 2025 campaign finance report that was filed Thursday. And they only include contributions and expenses made through March 31, leaving more than a week out before the April 8 election.
Read related: Vince Lago, Rhonda Anderson handily coast to re-election in Coral Gables
They include some interesting financial commitments from some interesting sources:
$50,000 from real estate developer Stuart Miller, executive chairman and co-chief executive officer of Lennar Corporation.
$25,000 from real estate developer Dagrosa Capital Partners, where Miami Mayor Francis Suarez is senior partner.
$20,000 in 20 separate $1,000 checks from real estate investor Tomas Cabrerizo.
$15,000 from investor Rafael Villoldo, who launched a scent with Donald Trump in 2012 when the former was vice president of Perfumania.
$12,000 from attorney Gonzalo Dorta, who is representing Lago in his lawsuit against Actualidad Radio.
$10,000 from The Calta Group, which is building Via Veneto, a luxury development of 10 three-story townhouses on Palermo Avenue with pre-construction prices starting $5.7 million.
$10,000 from Boston Capital, an asset management company that owns a mini storage facility in Kendall.
$10,000 from Republican super donor Max Alvarez of Sunshine Gasoline Distributors.
$7,500 from Andres Rodriguez, owner of The Salty Donut.
$5,000 from real estate investor Pablo Cejas.
$5,000 from the PAC that belongs to former Miami Commissioner Alex Diaz de la Portilla, the same PAC that got more than $200,000 in contributions that were flagged as bribes from the owners of a private school the commissioner wanted to gift a public park to. He was arrested on bribery and money laundering charges in 2023 that were later dropped.
Maybe that last one was a you scratch my back situation, since Lago gave ADLP’s PAC $5,000 in 2023, just six weeks before the latter was arrested.
Some of Lago’s expenses are interesting also, like the $22,575 (plus $8,500 last year) that went to Emiliano Antuñez, who also worked on the campaign for Vice Mayor Rhonda Anderson, mostly for door-knocking. That’s nothing compared to the more than $110,000 paid to head campaign consultant Jesse Manzano just since January.
Other expenses include $45,000 worth of TV and cable advertising, more than $35,000 in direct mail, more than 33,200 in phone banks, more than $15,000 in photo and video production, and $27,740 on his digital footprint and social media, not including $16,250 in media consulting paid to Daniel Bustamante. And that is just in the past few weeks.
Read related: Coral Gables Mayor Vince Lago rakes in campaign funds, much from developers
When added together, the $478,475 raised in Lago’s campaign account and the $389,000 raised for his PAC just this year, the total is $867,475. Doing more math shows that if you divide that by the 5,577 people who voted for Vinnie the Liar, the mayor basically paid $155.55 for each vote. And that’s not counting the PAC money from 2024. It’s probably more around $200.
In comparison, Commissioner Kirk Menendez, who lost with 38% of the vote, raised $32,500 for his PAC, The Coral Gables Way. A third of that was from different firefighters unions and another third was from real estate interests. Added to the $41,000 raised in his campaign account — which is almost as much as Lago spent just on text messages since January — that’s total of $73,500 through March 31. Divided by the 3,792 people who voted for him, that’s $19.38 per vote.
Both those figures will very likely go up once we get the campaign finance reports for the first eight days in April. But one thing that won’t change is the lopsided funding in this race and the special interests investments.
The post Re-elected Coral Gables Mayor Vince Lago’s PAC got $389K in three months appeared first on Political Cortadito.
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