A baker’s dozen of candidates are vying for the right to succeed term-limited Miami Mayor Francis Suarez.
Of them, six stand out for having the highest polling numbers, the longest uninterrupted tenures as “Magic City” residents and for raking in the most campaign cash.
Each of them has also served in at least one prominent government role.
Miami’s Mayor position is a “weak Mayor” post, meaning the office is largely symbolic and its holder carries little power aside from being able to hire and fire the City Manager and veto City Commission items. But having political experience and administrative savvy is still vital to the job.
Late last month, the six candidates — Miami Commissioner Joe Carollo, former City Manager Emilo González, Miami-Dade County Commissioner Eileen Higgins, former Miami Mayor Xavier Suarez, and former Miami Commissioner Alex Díaz de la Portilla and Ken Russell — participated in a debate hosted by the Downtown Neighbors Alliance (DNA).
Only candidates who polled above 5% in a survey that the DNA conducted were invited to participate.
During the debate, the mayoral hopefuls traded barbs over housing, corruption and city leadership. Higgins blamed Miami’s “broken” permitting system for the city’s housing crisis, while Russell and Díaz de la Portilla sparred over funding and past scandals. González and Carollo exchanged corruption accusations.
A separate debate NBC 6 held this month featured four candidates — González, Higgins, Russell and Suarez — who polled above 10% in a Griffin Catalyst survey. Carollo polled in excess of that threshold, too, but didn’t commit to the event by NBC’s deadline.
Joe Carollo wants his old Mayor job back after eight years on the City Commission. Image via Miami.
In terms of fundraising might and government experience in Miami, few can rival Carollo, the city’s term-limited District 3 Commissioner, who previously served two separate stints as Mayor.
Since filing to run for Mayor last month, he’s raised $26,500 through his campaign account. He also collected more than $686,000 this year through his political committee, Miami First, not counting another $1.84 million in carryover funds he still had in the PC.
Through early October this year, Carollo spent more than $558,000 on various campaign and political expenditures.
His campaign website says his priorities as Mayor would be to improve public safety and government accountability, restore public spaces, attract entrepreneurs and “world-class investment” to Miami, boost opportunities through education and protect local “heritage” by prioritizing residents, small businesses and “strengthening neighborhood identity.”
Carollo, a 70-year-old Republican born in Cuba, entered government service early as a police officer. He cut his political teeth as a young adult backing segregationist Alabama Gov. George Wallace’s 1976 campaign for President. Carollo said he was attracted to Wallace’s populist, small-government message, not his racist views. In 1979, he was reprimanded for slipping a drawing of a Ku Klux Klan member into a mailbox of a fellow Black police officer — a prank, he said.
That same year, he became the Miami Commission’s youngest member at 24. He almost immediately began clashing with the city’s then-Police Chief, who accused him of inappropriate and allegedly unlawful acts, including bribing cops seeking police favors for friends.
In 2001, he was arrested on later-dropped charges of domestic violence after he allegedly hit his then-wife in the head with a pot.
Twenty years later, after the city’s then-Police Chief Art Acevedo accused Carollo, Díaz de la Portilla and late Commissioner Manolo Reyes of repeatedly interfering with Miami Police Department affairs, Carollo led a successful charge to oust Acevedo that included showing a clip of the lawman impersonating Elvis Presley in tight pants.
Then, in 2023, two businessmen successfully sued for violating their First Amendment rights by weaponizing city resources to harass them after they backed their political opponent. An appellate court upheld the judgment this past July. Three months earlier, a Broward State Attorney’s Office investigation cleared Carollo of criminal wrongdoing for allegedly stalking and, who own the Ball & Chain restaurant and nightclub, harassing the businessmen and Acevedo. Last year, an insurer for Miami sued the city seeking a $5 million refund for legal costs incurred defending Carollo against numerous lawsuits since 2018. The case is not yet closed, according to the U.S. District Court of the Southern District of Florida.
If not for Emilio González’s actions earlier this year, the coming election might not even be happening. Image via X.
González, a 68-year-old born in Cuba, brings the most robust government background to the race. A U.S. Army veteran who rose to the rank of colonel, he served as Miami City Manager from 2017 to 2020, CEO of Miami International Airport (MIA) from 2013 to 2017 and as Director of Citizenship and Immigration Services at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security under President George W. Bush.
In private life, he works as a partner at investment management firm RSMD Investco LLC. He also serves as a member of the Treasury Investment Council under the Florida Department of Financial Services.
Since filing to run for Mayor in April, he’s raised more than $1 million and spent about $347,000.
He also amassed several high-profile endorsements, including nods from Gov. Ron DeSantis, U.S. Sens. Ted Cruz and Rick Scott, 11 formerpolice officials, former Miami Director of Human Services Milton Vickers, mixed martial arts star Jorge Masvidal, and Emmy award-winning reporter Michael Putney.
González vows, if elected, to work on rolling back property tax rates, establishing a “Deregulation Task Force” to unburden small businesses, prioritizing capital investments that protect Miamians, increasing the city’s police force, modernizing Miami services with technology and a customer-friendly approach, and rein in government spending and growth.
Notably, Miami’s Nov. 4 election this year might not have taken place if not for González, who successfullysued Miami in July to stop officials from delaying the city’s election until 2026.
Eileen Higgins’ background in international relations and industry, coupled with her service at County Hall, would help her serve as Miami’s first woman Mayor. Image via Eileen Higgins.
Higgins, a 61-year-old Democrat who was born in Ohio and grew up in New Mexico, comes into the race as the current longest-serving member of the Miami-Dade Commission. She won her seat in a 2018 Special Election and coasted back into re-election unopposed last year.
She’s vacating her seat three years early to run for Mayor.
Higgins boasts a broad, international background in government service. She worked for years in the private sector, overseeing global manufacturing in Europe and Latin America before returning stateside to lead marketing for companies like Pfizer and Jose Cuervo.
In 2006, she took a Director job with the Peace Corps in Belize, after which she served as a foreign service officer for the U.S. State Department under President Barack Obama, working in Mexico and in economic development areas in South Africa.
Her campaign platformfor Mayor prioritizes restoring trust in City Hall by fixing Miami’s permitting process and boosting government efficiency, improving affordability, advocating for police and first responders, enhancing transportation connectivity and efficiency, and shoring up the city’s resiliency against climate change effects.
Since filing in April, Higgins raised $156,000 through her campaign account. She also amassed close to $658,000 through her county-level political committee, Ethical Leadership for Miami. Close to a third of that sum — $175,000 — came through a transfer from her state-level PC.
Higgins spent more than $676,000 this year and had $336,300 left heading into October.
Her endorsers include Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava, Miami Gardens Sen. Shevrin Jones, Miami Rep. Ashley Gantt and South Miami Mayor Javier Fernández.
If elected, Higgins would make history as Miami’s first woman Mayor.
Xavier Suarez is the oldest candidate running for Mayor, but he views it as an asset, citing his prior experience as Mayor and his service as a Miami-Dade Commissioner. Image via Xavier Suarez.
Suarez, a 76-year-old lawyer with no party affiliation, made history in 1985 as Miami’s first Cuban-born Mayor. His son is the current Mayor.
He previously served as a Miami-Dade County Commissioner from 2011 to 2020 and left office after new term limit rules kicked in.
If elected, he said he’ll tackle property tax reform, including supporting Miami Rep. Vicki Lopez’s proposal to exempt all Miami-Dade residents whose homes don’t exceed the county’s median value ($575,000, on average) from paying property taxes.
Suarez wants to make mass transit in Miami free and promised to work with state lawmakers further to reform the “entire system of casualty insurance, beginning by having the state take over catastrophic insurance for all new affordable housing.”
He also backs proposed charter amendments to expand the Miami Commission from five to nine seats and align city elections with federal races.
Since filing in July, Suarez raised about $12,600 through his campaign account. Imagine Miami PAC, which he launched in mid-January, raised another $266,000 of which it has since spent $184,000, leaving him with about $82,000 about a month before Election Day.
Ken Russell may have been away from the spotlight awhile, but his policy priorities remain the same: Miami’s affordability issues need fixing, and the rising sea levels around it can’t be ignored. Image via Ken Russell. Image via Ken Russell.
Russell, a 52-year-old Democrat born in Coral Gables and raised in and around Miami, is seeking a comeback after three years away from elected office.
He served as Miami’s District 2 Commissioner from 2015 to 2022, when he ran unsuccessfully for Congress. As a city policymaker, Russell prioritized affordable housing and environmental protection.
As a day job, Russell owns and operates a Miami-based strategic consulting firm focused on environment, government, housing and transit. He previously owned a company that sold water sports gear and a seasonal woodworking business.
Since filing for the race in March, he’s raised and spent about $108,000.
Russell’s endorsers include Fort Lauderdale Mayor Dean Trantalis, former Pinecrest Mayor Cindy Lerner, former South Miami Mayor Phil Stoddard, retired Miami-Dade County Schools Administrator Freddie Young, NBA champion and philanthropist Udonis Haslem and historian, author and filmmaker Marvin Dunn.
VoteWater, a nonpartisan Florida-based group that supports “clean-water candidates,” is backing him too.
Alex Díaz de la Portilla said he lost his City Commission seat in 2023 after “political rivals and the fake media weaponized the legal system” against him. Image via AP.
Díaz de la Portilla, a 61-year-old Republican who was born in Miami, is part of a political family dynasty. Several men in his family, including his great-grandfather, served in the Cuban government, including the Cuban Senate, House and as the country’s Minister of Justice.
He and his brothers, Miguel and Renier, carried on that tradition, serving in various county and state offices.
Díaz de la Portilla served in both the state Senate and House, including stints as Senate Majority Leader and President Pro Tempore, before winning a seat on the Miami Commission in 2019. But in 2023, DeSantis suspended him from officeafter he was arrested on a host of corruption charges, including bribery, money laundering and criminal conspiracy — all of which the Broward State Attorney’s Office dropped just over a year later, citing inconsistent witness testimony and insufficient evidence.
Since he filed to run for Mayor last month, Díaz de la Portilla raised $101,000 through his campaign account. He also spent about $370,200 this year through his political committee, Proven Leadership for Miami-Dade County PC, which still had $60,000 left in it by Sept. 30.
Curiously, Díaz de la Portilla does not have a campaign website. He’s also been largely absent from social media since June.
Other candidates running include Republicans Christian Cevallos, Alyssa Crocker and June Savage; Democrats Elijah Bowdre and Michael Hepburn; and Laura Anderson and Kenneth “K.J. DeSantis, who have no party affiliation.
Anderson, Cevallos, Crocker and DeSantis — who says he’s related to the Governor — haven’t lived in Miami for longer than two years. Bowdre and Savage have lived in the city for at least three years.
Hepburn, a consistent Miami candidate, has alternatively lived in Miami and South Miami since 2016. He most recently moved back to Miami in September 2024, less than a week before he would have been ineligible to run.
Of the lower-polling candidates, Hepburn leads fundraising with $38,400 in donations and $61,600 worth of in-kind contributions. If elected, he’d become Miami’s first Black Mayor.
Miami’s elections are technically nonpartisan, but party politics are frequently still a factor.
The General Election is Nov. 4. If no candidate tops 50% in a race, the top two advance to a Dec. 9 runoff.
Senate and House Democrats unveiled what they described as the first three bills of a growing ‘Affordability Agenda’ they promise will lower housing costs for Floridians while cracking down on wasteful government spending.
More are on the way, according to Senate Democratic Leader Lori Berman, who introduced the legislation alongside House Democratic Leader Fentrice Driskell and nine others Tuesday.
“We constantly hear from people back home that affordability is the No. 1 issue facing Floridians right now. Costs are skyrocketing, and it’s getting harder to make ends meet,” Driskell said.
“That’s why Democrats are focused on real solutions that will improve the lives of Florida’s working families and our seniors. The ideas in our ‘Affordability Agenda’ would lower the cost of living, put money back in the pockets of working families and seniors who need it most, and give young people a real chance at some day owning a home.
The first proposal (SB 366, HB 319), which Florida Politics first detailed in November, would lay the foundation for a potential multistate insurance compact the Sunshine State could enter with other states.
Under the proposal, Florida and other participant states could share catastrophe risk, increase bargaining power with global reinsurers and, ultimately, stabilize their respective insurance markets, effectively spreading a collective safety net to spread the rising cost of disaster losses.
The legislation would compel Florida’s Office of Insurance Regulation to develop the compact with at least 14 other states by Dec. 31, 2027.
Boca Raton Rep. Kelly Skidmore, who is carrying the legislation with Palm Beach Sen. Mack Bernard, said policymakers in several states — including California, North Carolina and South Carolina — have expressed interest in joining.
The benefits could be substantial, Skidmore said, adding that Floridians already pay some of the highest premiums in the nation, and costs are expected to keep rising.
“The proposed legislation recognizes that no single state can bear these growing risks alone,” she said. “Families are struggling. Some can’t afford the cost of homeownership anymore. If we don’t tackle the risk that is driving this crisis, we will threaten that homeownership, economic growth and the stability of our entire insurance system.”
Another pair of twin bills (SB 756, HB 675) would augment the updated Live Local Act, which lawmakers first enacted in 2023 with unanimous support to ramp up affordable housing development and conversion.
Driskell and Tampa Sen. Tracie Davis, the Senate Democratic Leader-designate, are sponsoring the new measures, dubbed the “H.O.M.E. Act.” Among other things, it would require all incentives under Live Local to be used to build affordable housing, lower the price point for what can be considered affordable in a given area and eliminate documentary stamp taxes for first-time homebuyers who use the property as their primary residence.
On that last feature, there may be an opportunity for cross-aisle collaboration; St. Petersburg Republican Sen. Nick DiCeglie has filed a bill (SB 752) that would also enable first-time homesteaded homebuyers to skip the stamp tax.
“We’re hearing it everywhere — young people with new families, folks starting out in their careers — they’re getting squeezed out of the housing market,” Davis said, noting that just 1 in 5 people who buy a house, townhome or condo in Florida are first-time homeowners, according to Florida Realtors.
The national rate is 32%.
“For many, the biggest obstacle isn’t the monthly mortgage; it’s the money they have to pay up front, and the documentary stamp taxes can add nearly $4,300 at closing. For someone just starting out, that dollar amount is excessive and feels like it’s impossible,” Davis said. “The H.O.M.E. Act gives these buyers a real chance.”
Last and newest on the “Affordability Agenda” is SB 780by Berman, which would require a sweeping review of state spending to identify fraud, waste, abuse of authority, mismanagement or misconduct.
The measure, effective July 1, 2026, would direct the Office of Program Policy Analysis and Government Accountability, the Auditor General and the Government Efficiency Task Force to jointly examine a wide range of state programs — from Hope Florida contracts, litigation costs, education materials and college expenditures like high per-student spending at New College of Florida to migration-related spending, like the Governor’s relocation flights and Alligator Alcatraz — and issue a findings report.
If the review uncovers misuse, the Attorney General must pursue recovery, and any recouped or “at-risk” funds must be transferred to the General Revenue Fund to create a new “Working Floridians” tax rebate program for households that receive the federal earned income tax credit.
“The biggest stories in Florida this year have all been about wasteful spending — a quarter of a billion dollars in no-bid contracts to Alligator Alcatraz, exorbitant per-student costs at New College of Florida, shady land deals that enrich political donors and, of course, the ongoing investigation into Hope Florida,” Berman said.
“Floridians shouldn’t be paying taxes to fund political stunts, sweetheart deals and high-paying jobs for politically connected friends.”
Skidmore called Republicans’ efforts to eliminate local property taxes or severely hamper the ability of localities to levy them a “fool’s gold narrative,” since all actual proposals so far exempt the elimination of taxes for police and schools.
“What (they’re) offering people is not the savings that they think they’re getting when you tell them you’re going to eliminate property taxes,” she said. “What we’re talking about is actual savings — money in your pocket, a reduction of your insurance, the ability to buy a house.”
Others participating in the presser included Sen. Barbara Sharief, House Democratic Leader-designate Christine Hunschofsky, and Reps. Rita Harris, Leonard Spencer, Allison Tant, Marie Woodson and RaShon Young.
Small businesses and private nonprofit organizations impacted by Florida’s seasonal drought in April are being urged to apply for low-interest federal disaster loans to help deal with losses.
The U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) has set Jan. 5 as the deadline for the drought relief applications. The drought was so severe in April that there was a federal disaster declaration in more than a dozen Florida counties, including, Alachua, Brevard, Flagler, Hernando, Lake, Levy, Marion, Orange, Osceola, Pasco, Polk, Putnam, Seminole, Sumter and Volusia.
“Many locations in the Peninsula saw one of their top 5 driest Aprils on record, including Gainesville (3rd-driest), Daytona Beach (2nd-driest), Titusville (2nd-driest), Melbourne (2nd-driest), Venice (2nd-driest), Vero Beach (4th-driest), Naples (3rd-driest), and West Palm Beach (4th-driest),” concluded the Climate Center report on April’s drought conditions.
The SBA Economic Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL) program is being made available to businesses, nonprofits, small agricultural cooperatives and nurseries that can show direct financial loss caused by that event. The SBA points out that the agency is unable to provide disaster loans to agricultural producers, farmers and ranchers, with the exception of aquaculture businesses.
“Through a declaration by the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture, SBA provides critical financial assistance to help communities recover,” said Chris Stallings, Associate Administrator of the Office of Disaster Recovery and Resilience at the SBA. “We’re pleased to offer loans to small businesses and private nonprofits impacted by these disasters.”
The EIDLs are available for working capital needs caused by the disaster. Even if there was no physical damage, some of the loans are still accessible. The loans are designed to help small-business owners pay debts, payroll, accounts payable and other debt accrued during the disaster.
Gubernatorial candidate James Fishback has been registered to vote in two states since around 2020. While he never cast a ballot in both states in the same year, the issue raises questions about whether the Madison Republican meets eligibility requirements for Governor.
The 30-year-old has been registered to vote in Florida since 2012. He transferred his residence from Davie in Broward County to Madison County in 2023, according to the Madison County Supervisor of Elections Office.
But the D.C. Board of Electionsconfirms Fishback remains an active voter in Washington, where he registered in 2020.
That could complicate Fishback’s campaign for Governor, which he launched last month. Florida’s eligibility requirements for Governor require candidates to be registered to vote in Florida and to be residents of the state for at least seven years.
Of note, state law also requires a candidate for partisan office to be a registered member of the party for 365 days before an election. While Fishback is registered as a Republican in Florida, he is registered without party affiliation in Washington.
Fishback dismissed concerns about his eligibility to run for the GOP nomination for Governor.
“I’m a fourth generation Floridian and have lived here my entire life, and meet all of the constitutional requirements to serve as Governor if the voters entrust me with this awesome responsibility,” he said in a text to Florida Politics.
But despite being a Florida native, Fishback’s residency could be called into question. Fishback owns a property in Washington on 42nd Street, and records show he claimed a homestead exemption on it.
That’s notably a different address than the Davis Place residence where he is registered to vote. That property is owned by Aydee Fishback, according to Washington records, and Florida records show Jay Fishback as a primary owner of the Washington property.
James Fishback is the primary owner of a Pinkney Street home in Madison on property he purchased in 2022, according to Madison County property records. No homestead exemption is held on that property.
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Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics contributed to this report.