State lawmakers don’t ordinarily involve themselves in the employment practices of the localities they serve, but Republican Rep. Fabián Basabe isn’t your ordinary state lawmaker.
The Miami Beach Republican wants Bay Harbor Islands Town Manager Lindsley Noel to fire Town Attorney Joe Geller by ending its contract with Geller’s firm, Greenspoon Marder, arguing Geller is frequently late to meetings and has allowed a backlog of legal matters to pile up.
Basabe sent Noel a letter last week requesting that items be placed on the Town Council’s Wednesday agenda to effectuate Geller’s and his firm’s replacement.
No such measures are on the agenda. But both Basabe and his district counterpart in the Legislature’s upper chamber, Miami Gardens Democratic Sen. Shevrin Jones, are scheduled to speak.
Basabe confirmed that Geller’s employment will be his focus and shared his prepared remarks with Florida Politics.
Among other things, Basabe says Geller, a former state lawmaker who in November won a seat on the Miami-Dade County School Board, doesn’t appear to take his job seriously and “leaves behind work for others to complete.”
Basabe takes exception with a $1,500 monthly raise the Town Council recently approved unanimously for Greenspoon Marder. He cites a “long list of pending items” he says Geller either purposely disregarded or was unable to handle that compelled the town to hire additional lawyers.
Basabe notes a years-long problem with air conditioners at a local K-8 school that he contends Geller ignored and he is addressing. He calls Geller an “establishment” politician whose dual roles as a Town Attorney and School Board member create a “clear conflict of interest.”
As evidence of what he characterizes as a lackadaisical work ethic, Basabe points to Geller’s absence from Wednesday’s Town Council meeting and the School Board during the first week of the new school year.
Joe Geller as a state Representative in 2019. He now serves on the Miami-Dade County School Board and is again endorsing a fellow Democrat challenging Fabián Basabe for the seat he held until 2022. Image via Florida House.
Geller, speaking by phone while on vacation in Italy, called Basabe’s accusations thinly veiled political attacks.
“I don’t think it’s a secret that Mr. Basabe and I aren’t friends,” he said. “I endorsed former (Bay Harbor Islands) Mayor Jordan Leonard to succeed me in the seat. Surprisingly, in a big Republican year, Mr. Basabe won by a couple hundred votes. I endorsed Joe Saunders against Mr. Basabe in the last cycle. And I’m now endorsing my good friend Lucia Báez-Geller, who was my predecessor (on the School Board and is now running against Basabe). I guess this is his political response.”
Geller said the pay increase his firm received is far from an alarming sum, all things considered. “But we appreciate the opportunity to serve the town,” he said, “and we think we do a good job at it.”
He said pending legal items aren’t abnormal in municipal operations and that the additional lawyers Bay Harbor Islands recently tapped came at the Town Council’s recommendation and are assisting with a large public-private partnership to develop a new Town Hall.
“It’s arguably something (My firm) might have been charging separately for anyway, since it’s a special project,” he said. “We weren’t. And we continue to be involved, but it was a request from the Council and had nothing to do with our ability to get it done.”
Geller said that while Basabe’s letter complains of overlapping interests between the town and School Board, it includes no specific examples “because there aren’t any.”
“What’s the conflict? That we all want to see the kids get a good education?” he said.
As for the air conditioning issue, Geller said he’s been a School Board member for less than a year, while Basabe has represented the district since late 2022, and that Basabe is only now bringing it up because it’s political expedient. But for the record, Geller said, the school’s principal singled him out, not Basabe, as being a “consistent voice” in working to fix the issue in a recent communicationto parents and guardians.
“He doesn’t know what he’s talking about. This is a guy that’s not beloved even by his own party. He’s a guy with a checkered past. He’s been subject to multiple concerning allegations, and I’m not just talking about personal allegations. I’m talking about political things too,” he said.
“I held Basabe’s job for eight years and didn’t cause the problems he has. I certainly never went to the town or anyone else and said, ‘Put this on your agenda or else,’ which is the implicit statement he’s making here.”
Florida Politics contacted Noel and Deputy Town Manager Evelyn Herbello for comment, but neither responded immediately.
Mills was a day-one Byron Donalds backer in the gubernatorial race.
A former House Speaker and current candidate for Governor is leading the charge for Republicans as scandal swirls around a Congressman.
Saying the “evidence is mounting” against Rep. Cory Mills, Paul Renner says other candidates for Governor should “stand up and be counted” and join him in the call for Mills to leave Congress.
Renner made the call earlier this week.
But on Friday, the Palm Coast Republican doubled down.
He spotlighted fresh reporting from Roger Sollenberger alleging that Mills’ company “appears to have illegally exported weapons while he serves in Congress, including to Ukraine,” that Mills failed to disclose conflicts of interest, “tried to fistfight other Republican members of Congress, and lied about his party stature to bully other GOP candidates out of primaries that an alleged romantic interest was running in,” and lied about his conversion to Islam.
The House Ethics Committee is already probing Mills, a New Smyrna Beach Republican, over allegations of profiting from federal defense contracts while in Congress. More recently, the Committee expanded its work to review allegations that he assaulted one ex-girlfriend and threatened to share intimate photos of another.
Other candidates have been more reticent in addressing the issue, including Rep. Byron Donalds.
“When any other members have been involved and stuff like this, my advice is the same,” said Donalds, a Naples Republican. “They need to actually spend a lot more time in the district and take stock of what’s going on at home, and make that decision with their voters.”
The response came less than a year after Mills, a New Smyrna Beach Republican, spoke at the launch of Donalds’ gubernatorial campaign.
Prominent Democrats will be on hand at a number of stops.
Former Miami-Dade Commissioner Eileen Higgins is enlisting more big names as support at early vote stops ahead of Tuesday’s special election for Mayor, including a Senate candidate, a former Senate candidate, and a current candidate for Governor.
During her canvass kickoff at 10 a.m at Elizabeth Virrick Park, Higgins will appear with U.S. Senate Candidate Hector Mujica.
Early vote stops follow, with Higgins solo at the 11 a.m. show-up at Miami City Hall and the 11:30 at the Shenandoah Library.
From there, big names from Orlando will be with the candidate.
Orange County Mayor and candidate for Florida Governor Jerry Demings and former Congresswoman Val Demings will appear with Higgins at the Liberty Square Family & Friends Picnic (2 p.m.), Charles Hadley Park (3 p.m.), and the Carrie P. Meek Senior and Cultural Center (3:30 p.m.)
Higgins, who served on the County Commission from 2018 to 2025, is competing in a runoff for the city’s mayoralty against former City Manager Emilio González. The pair topped 11 other candidates in Miami’s Nov. 4 General Election, with Higgins, a Democrat, taking 36% of the vote and González, a Republican, capturing 19.5%.
To win outright, a candidate had to receive more than half the vote. Miami’s elections are technically nonpartisan, though party politics frequently still play into races.
The cold war between Florida’s Governor and his predecessor is nearly seven years old and tensions show no signs of thawing.
On Friday, Sen. Rick Scott weighed in on Florida Politics’reporting on the Agency for Health Care Administration’s apparent repayment of $10 million of Medicaid money from a settlement last year, which allegedly had been diverted to the Hope Florida Foundation, summarily filtered through non-profits through political committees, and spent on political purposes.
“I appreciate the efforts by the Florida legislature to hold Hope Florida accountable. Millions in tax dollars for poor kids have no business funding political ads. If any money was misspent, then it should be paid back by the entities responsible, not the taxpayers,” Scott posted to X.
While AHCA Deputy Chief of Staff Mallory McManus says that is an “incorrect” interpretation, she did not respond to a follow-up question asking for further detail this week.
The $10 million under scrutiny was part of a $67 million settlement from state Medicaid contractor Centene, which DeSantis said was “a cherry on top” in the settlement, arguing it wasn’t truly from Medicaid money.
But in terms of the Scott-DeSantis contretemps, it’s the latest example of tensions that seemed to start even before DeSantis was sworn in when Scott left the inauguration of his successor, and which continue in the race to succeed DeSantis, with Scott enthusiastic about current front runner Byron Donalds.
Earlier this year, Scott criticized DeSantis’ call to repeal so-called vaccine mandates for school kids, saying parents could already opt out according to state law.
While running for re-election to the Senate in 2024, Scott critiqued the Heartbeat Protection Act, a law signed by DeSantis that banned abortion after the sixth week of pregnancy with some exceptions, saying the 15 week ban was “where the state’s at.”
In 2023 after Scott endorsed Donald Trump for President while DeSantis was still a candidate, DeSantis said it was an attempt to “short circuit” the voters.
That same year amid DeSantis’ conflict over parental rights legislation with The Walt Disney Co., Scott said it was important for Governors to “work with” major companies in their states.
The critiques went both ways.
When running for office, DeSantis distanced himself from Scott amid controversy about the Senator’s blind trust for his assets as Governor.
“I basically made decisions to serve in uniform, as a prosecutor, and in Congress to my financial detriment,” DeSantis said in October 2018. “I’m not entering (office) with a big trust fund or anything like that, so I’m not going to be entering office with those issues.”
In 2020, when the state’s creaky unemployment website couldn’t handle the surge of applicants for reemployment assistance as the pandemic shut down businesses, DeSantis likened it to a “jalopy in the Daytona 500” and Scott urged him to “quit blaming others” for the website his administration inherited.
The chill between the former and current Governors didn’t abate in time for 2022’s hurricane season, when Scott said DeSantis didn’t talk to him after the fearsome Hurricane Ian ravaged the state.