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If good things truly come to those who wait, then Ralph Rosado
may just be in luck.
Rosado announced recently that he was running for the Miami city commission seat now occupied by Commissioner Francis Suarez, who has not announced yet but is expected to run for mayor since he is termed out and can’t put it off again (more on that later).
Rosado was going to run in 2013 but withdrew after Suarez abandoned the mayoral race in the face of a few campaign setbacks (most notably, two of his staffers were charged with absentee ballot fraud).
Read related story: Beleaguered Francis Suarez drops out of Miami mayoral race
“I have some exciting news to share — I am re-starting my campaign for City of Miami
Commissioner for District 4,” Rosado told supporters in an evite to his kick-off at Ball and Chain last week.
District 4 encompasses the neighborhoods of Shenandoah, Silver Bluff, Coral Gate, Golden Pines, West Little Havana, Flagami and Flagler Gardens. Did you know there was a neighborhood called Flagler Gardens? Neither did Ladra.
“As someone that was born and raised in the City, that learned in its schools and that played in its parks, I look forward to addressing the challenges ahead,” he said in his invitation.
The event was a hit, with a large turnout of supporters that included El Portal Mayor Claudia Cubillos, Bay Harbor Islands Mayor Jordan Leonard — and campaign groupies Mercy Sabina, Juan D’Arce and Barbie Rodriguez-Gimenez, daughter-in-law of Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez.
Rosado hasn’t filed any official paperwork, at least that you can see online on the city’s website. But neither has anyone else in that seat. Ladra expects there to be some competition, however. Four people had filed intention to run before Suarez abandoned the mayor’s race in 2013.
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Eight months ’til the general election and local Democrats decided that they need Juan Cuba is back
at the helm of the Miami-Dade party.
Cuba, who had served as executive director for two years before leaving in 2014 to be a political strategist for the Service Employees International Union, was back on the job this week — just in time to welcome Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julian Castro and Congresswoman and DNC Chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz at a pre-debate party Wednesday.
Because this is all about November.
“I’m excited to be back with the Miami-Dade Democratic Party. This is the most important election of my lifetime, especially with the Supreme Court hanging in the balance,” Cuba told Ladra.
Read related story: Juan Cuba leaves Dade Dems for union job, doing the same
“I want to make sure we deliver a big margin of victory in Miami-Dade for the Democratic nominee, and that we are electing Democrats up and down the ballot,” he said, although Ladra can’t help but notice a dearth of any real, viable Democrat candidates in vulnerable seats like the one held by State Rep. Carlos Trujillo, whose district went to Obama in 2012.
But Cuba, who was sorta forced to run for office in that “No Free Rides” campaign the Dade Dems launched (unsuccessfully)
against GOP House incumbents, isn’t going to run again after losing nearly 2 to 1 against State Rep. Jose Pepe “Selfie King” Diaz. He’d rather help increase voter participation from the big picture perspective.
He also promised that Dade Dems — who got involved in local government issues when the subsidy to the Miami Dolphins was first floated and then fought library closures and helped get Commissioner Daniella Levine-Cava elected in 2014 — would stay engaged in local politics.
“Even though the elections are nonpartisan, the candidates are not,” he said.
Read related story: Dade Dems wage full House battle with 6 challengers
“Right now, you have elected officials who abuse anti-poverty funds and spend it on luxury development, people who want to cut services in low-income neighborhoods but have no problem providing subsidies to millionaires and billionaires,” Cuba said, and Ladra can’t help but think he’s talking about the county mayor.
“There are efforts to privatize municipal services including our water supply, and inaction around transit and affordable housing that can help low-income families.”
Yep. I was right. That’s Carlos Gimenez to a T.
“We are going to apply our Democratic values to local issues and fight for working families,” Cuba said.
And since Ladra is officially on Team Raquel (working with the mayor’s opponent, Miami-Dade School Board Member Raquel Regalado), our tail is wagging. Because I think, by now, the Democrats — who had tried to get Miami-Dade Commissioner Jean Monestime to run — have given up on finding their own candidate for the mayoral race.
Welcome back, Juan!
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After taking five whole days to lick his wounds, Former Gov. Jeb Bush — who dropped
out of the Republican presidential race after he came in fourth in South Carolina Saturday — sent an email Wednesday thanking supporters for sticking by his lazy, Eyeore self and defending his lackluster campaign.
It’s probably the last email we’ll be getting from info@Jeb2016.com — unless there’s an endorsement coming later. Sen. Marco Rubio told reporters on Tuesday that he and his former mentor had spoken by phone and agreed to meet in the future.
“He’s just decompressing from this election,” Rubio is quoted as saying. “And trying to get going again in the rest of his life.”
We guess that begins by sending the saddest political email Ladra has ever read. It’s also as exciting and engaging as the Bush campaign. Exactly. After you read this, you have to think “no wonder.”
Here is Jeb’s goodbye email in its entirety:
“Dear Friend,
I wanted to take just a moment to thank you for all your hard work on my behalf. While the result was not what we had hoped, we communicated very important ideas and campaigned true to the belief that the Republican nominee must be hopeful and optimistic.
Every step of the way, we offered solutions to problems and I spoke out for what I believe, even if that meant I was the only one on the trail willing to challenge the voices of division and demagoguery.
Through your support, you lent strength and conviction to our effort and in particular to the policy ideas for greater economic growth and national security preparedness that we know are so important to the future of our great country.
Despite the results, I still believe we can make this the greatest time to be alive if we fix a few big things, and I will continue to fight for that as a private citizen.
Columba and I appreciate your support and will always remember your steadfast friendship.
Onward!
Jeb”
Onward, indeed. No hint as to who he might back in the important race or what he may be doing as a private citizen. But Ladra forsees some kind of foundation or something. He really can’t go back too the private sector now that he doesn’t have a presidency or other public office in his near future.
Stay tuned. At the very least, we’re going to want to know how he votes on March 15.
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Three Miami congress members will basically eat crow today when they
formally endorse Sen. Marco Rubio in the GOP presidential primary.
Marquito wasn’t their first choice. But U.S. Reps. Carlos Curbelo, Mario Diaz-Balart and Ileana Ros-Lehtinen suddenly find themselves without a candidate in the race, since their loser pick, former Gov. Jeb Bush, withdrew Saturday after coming in fourth in South Carolina.
Ladra understands that they don’t want to be shut out of the White House should the universe align and Rubio pull an impossible feat by winning not only the nomination and then the presidency over Hillary Clinton. But just how valuable is this runner-up nod? Not much.
Read related story: Gloves are off in Jeb Bush vs Marco Rubio primary
Nobody is going to forget what Ileana said months ago — that Rubio ought to wait his turn. That he wasn’t mature enough yet. What’s she going to say now to get back on Rubio’s good side? That it’s his turn now? Boy, he grew up a lot in 48 hours.
She told Michael Putney on WPLG Local 10s’s This Week in South Florida Sunday that “This Week in South Florida,” Ros-Lehtinen said “we know and love Marco. We never said one negative word about Marco.”
What is Diaz-Balart going to say? He said months ago that he was “all in” with Jeb. “I don’t think there’s anybody more prepared to be president than Jeb Bush,” he told The Hill.
Now he’s going to say there’s nobody more prepared than Rubio? Or is Marco just the next best prepared? Could he be saying the same thing about Texas Sen. Ted Cruz next month?
Read related story: Presidential absentee ballots drop today to 157,000+ voters
Yes, he could. Because this is how it is in party politics, people.
This sudden Rubio love — an official endorsement at a joint press conference is expected Monday afternoon — is going to be hardest for Curbelo to swallow. He and Rubio have had a longtime feud, rooted in the day Marco beat him for the local party chairmanship and solidified with Curbelo’s giddy backing of Charlie Crist for Senator against his Cuban-American hermano.
What about Jeb? Everyone wants to know if he’s going to throw his weight behind his onetime protege. And how is that going to sound after he’s attacked Rubio on the campaign trail and in debates? Suddenly the no-show votes and abandoning ship on his immigration reform aren’t all that important?
Bush may have hinted at a coming Rubio endorsement
with his concession speech Saturday, which sounded a little like the Senator’s stump speech.
“Over the last seven years, our nation’s bright light has become little more than a flicker. We have retreated from the world stage. The American values that have brought peace and opportunity are fading. That is not the America we know and love,” Bush said.
“America is a country that thinks big, acts boldly and leads without apology. It will be up to the next president to restore that kind of leadership.”
Then again, maybe he’s talking about Donald Trump.
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Poor Annette Taddeo. She must be pulling her hair out and/or crying her
eyes out.
Former Congressman Joe Garcia jumped into the race less than three weeks ago and already he looks like the front runner.
First, he releases an internal poll that shows him with a double digit lead over his one-time BFF. Okay, it’s an internal poll. But Ladra believes it. Number one, it’s what made him jump into the race (conducted two weeks earlier). And, number 2, no surprise that people still don’t like Annette. They’ve had practice at it and voted against her three times already.
And Saturday, Garcia hit the ground running with a bigger and seemingly better organized operation than Taddeo, who has been campaigning for his old seat for nearly a year.
Garcia dampened Taddeo’s mad desire to be an elected something or other when he announced Feb. 3 that he did, after all, intend to run for the seat he lost two years ago to U.S. Rep. Carlos Curbelo in an off-year election clouded with headlines about absentee ballot fraud. This year’s Hillary-topped ballot could be enough to help voters forget that his chief of staff and onetime campaign manager was sentenced to 90 days for absentee ballot fraud.
Read related story: Musical seats game on as Joe Garcia jumps into FL26 race
And he’s already gotten to work. Garcia kicked off his first “Cafecito with Joe” door-to-door
neighborhood event Saturday with more than 20 supporters at Ankarr Pastries on Kendall Drive. Garcia talked immigration, a higher minimum wage, making college more affordable and fighting the big, bad Republicans who want to repeal Obamacare, defund Planned Parenthood and oppose the President’s right to select a new Supreme Court Justice.
After cafecitos, Garcia and his supporters knocked on voters’ doors, as he posted on his twitter feed.
“Today, we showed what we can do when
we tackle our problems the South Florida way,” Garcia said in a statement.
“We had cafecitos and a lively discussion and then we all got to work, knocking on the doors of our neighbors and making plans to go back to Washington to fight for a better immigration system, a $15 an hour living minimum wage, and affordable college so our sons and daughters can get an education without the burden of tens of thousands of dollars in student loan debt.”
A campaign statement said these “cafecitos with Joe” would be weekly.
Taddeo, seen here hosting a Garcia fundraiser in 2014,
has been talking about some of these things. The difference is nobody’s been really listening. Maybe because it’s her fourth running after losing once to Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, a county commission race to Lynda Bell and, most recently, the governor’s race, as Charlie Crist‘s running mate, in 2014.
Her best bet in the primary is to remind people of Joe’s prior campaign’s transgressions. And she knows that. Taddeo’s campaign issued a strongly worded email, yet again beseeching money, when Garcia announced.
“Sadly the 26th District has instead endured a series of politicians who’ve put self-interest first, acted unethically, and at times even acted illegally,” the campaign said in a statement earlier this month.
“It’s time to turn the page. The communities of South Florida deserve better.”
Read related story: Miami GOP draws first blood on Joe Garcia in FL26 race
It’s also going to be the crux of Curbelo’s campaign if Garcia makes it to the general.
Ladra is no fan of Curbelo, who has a secret list of clients he may still serve as a congressman (talk about access!). But it serves Joe right.
After all, he got into office on the headlines of former Congressman David Rivera‘s own campaign transgressions.
Karma works in politics, too.
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