Republican Claudia Villatoro thinks Democratic U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz has failed to deliver for Floridians during her ample time in Congress, and it’s time voters make a change.
Villatoro is running in Florida’s 25th Congressional District to unseat Wasserman Schultz, who has served in Congress for 20 years.
During that time, Wasserman Schultz has sponsored three bills that become law: the Legislative Branch Appropriations Act of 2010, the EARLY Act Reauthorization of 2014 and a resolution last year to study the potential transfer of a museum.
That’s a better rate than South Florida’s senior delegation member, Republican Mario Díaz-Balart, who hasn’t seen a bill he’s been the primary sponsor of become law since 2004. But it’s still insufficient, according to Villatoro, a former commodities broker who said Wasserman Schultz has instead prioritized “open borders,” enriching herself through “insider trading” and orchestrating “rigged elections for Hillary Clinton.”
Notably, Wasserman Schultz does not advocate for “open borders” and has instead advocated for a comprehensive approach to immigration reform that combines a formal, legal immigration process and border security with a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants already in the U.S.
There is also no public evidence that Wasserman Schultz “enriched herself” through insider trading. Like many members of Congress, she trades individual stocks and periodically files required STOCK Act disclosures. She has, however, been cited by watchdogs and media for late disclosures — a reporting violation — including this past July, when she was found to have violated the STOCK Act for a fourth time.
As for “rigged elections,” leaks from internal messages at the Democratic National Committee (DNC) in 2016 — which Wasserman Schultz chaired at the time — revealed favoritism for Clinton over presidential candidate Bernie Sanders. The violation of DNC’s neutrality norms prompted Wasserman Schultz to resign as Chair that year, and the DNC apologized to Sanders, whom many today still believe would have beaten Clinton in an unbiased Primary.
“Time to wash away Debbie Wasserman Schultz and her failed politics. Florida deserves fresh leadership. That’s why I’m running for Congress,” Villatoro says in a 90-second campaign launch video.
The video features heavy use of glass-related terms and imagery, a handheld pressure washer and photos of President Donald Trump and Republican U.S. Rep. Jimmy Patronis.
“I am an entrepreneur and philanthropist, an immigrant who followed the rules. Running a glass company taught me to always be crystal clear, fully transparent and as strong as steel,” Villatoro adds.
“I’ve broken glass ceilings, campaigned tirelessly for justice and freedom and fought child trafficking around the world. I’ve stood with President Trump to secure our borders and keep America strong. South Florida needs leaders who will listen to you and never crack under pressure. I’m Claudia Villatoro, and the choice is clear. It’s time to clean up Congress.”
Villatoro, 57, was born in Guatemala and immigrated legally to the U.S. in 1994. After working for years in the glass industry, she launched her first company in 2002 and “grew it into several successful ventures across Florida, New Mexico, and California,” according to her campaign, which said President George W. Bush recognized her as “Businesswoman of the Year” in 2003.
Around that same time, she landed a federal contract with White Sands Missile Range.
In 2009, after the Great Recession hit, Villatoro joined the Chicago Board of Trade, where she remained a member until 2020.
The following year, she founded the nonprofit Villatoro’s Global Foundation, which her campaign website says is “dedicated to fighting child trafficking, malnutrition, and water insecurity.”
The organization launched in St. Petersburg and later relocated to Hollywood, where Villatoro ran unsuccessfully for City Commission last year. The organization is notrated by Charity Navigator or GuideStar.
This past May, the IRS revoked the tax-exempt status of Villatoro’s Global Foundation after it failed to file proper documentation for three straight years. A ProPublica analysis of the organization’s books indicates it has no revenue, expenses, assets or liabilities.
Villatoro is running on a promise to lower the cost of living, secure the southern border while supporting legal immigration, empower small businesses and entrepreneurs, and protect children from crime and trafficking.
She also vows to support American energy independence, defend constitutional freedoms and “reject the socialist policies she and her family fled in Latin America.”
Neither Villatoro’s campaign launch video nor press release mentioned reporting on how the Trump family has made billions in cryptocurrency ventures or how the President recently pardoned crypto tycoon Changpeng Zhao, who pleaded guilty in 2023 for failing to combat money laundering tied to terrorism and child abuse.
Zhao’s company, Binance, was financially involved with crypto platform World Liberty Financial, which sends 75% of token sales revenue to a Trump-linked company.
Trump claimed in a new “60 Minutes” interview to have “no idea” who Zhao is.
In 2024, Villatoro donated $5,000 to Joyce Bryan’s Broward County School Board campaign, $2,500 to the Republican Party of Florida and $1,000 to Chris Eddy, who challenged Wasserman Schultz last cycle.
She also gave $500 to George Navarini, a perennial candidate for the Florida House.
She is one of two Republicans running now to supplant Wasserman Schultz, who beat Eddy in November by 9 percentage points. The other is Michael Carbonara, a 42-year-old fintech executive who raised nearly $900,000 in crypto last quarter.
Last week, Florida Bulldog reportedon three ongoing lawsuits filed against Carbonara or his company.
One filed in Miami involves the alleged sexual assault and abuse of an employee in Singapore by a co-owner of Carbonara’s company, Ibanera. Another in Miami centers on claims that Ibanera failed to transmit at least $18 million in fiat and crypto funds to a Bahamian bank.
The third, filed in Michigan, revolves around a bitcoin mining operation linked to Carbonara that allegedly created excessive noise, prompting residents to complain and the Judge presiding over the case to temporarily shut the facility down.
Wasserman Schultz has raised about $1.25 million this cycle and has $1.62 million in cash on hand.
CD 25covers the southernmost portion of Broward County, including Davie, Hollywood, Miramar, Pembroke Pines, Weston and parts of Plantation. The district has a D+5 partisan voting index, according to Cook Partisan Voting — a composition Villatoro’s campaign says puts the seat long held by Wasserman Shultz, 59, “firmly in play for Republicans.”
Condominium closings also increased in Palm Beach and Broward counties in October.
South Florida single-family home sales for November saw some notable improvement in the year-over-year comparisons while Miami-Dade County is still lagging in the back of the pack.
The monthly analysis of the three coastal counties from the Elliman Report in South Florida was released in the past week and it shows solid property sales in Palm Beach and Broward counties. Both of those counties showed notable upticks in signed contracts on single-family home closings last month with Broward leading the way.
There were 387 homes sold in Broward in November. That’s a 98.5% jump in closing contracts over November 2024 when there 195 houses sold. While the annual comparison is upbeat, Broward saw a slight downturn in monthly sales. There were 466 homes sold in October, accounting for an 18.52% decrease in the monthly sales.
“All property types showed a combined annual gain in new signed contracts for the third time (this year), with outsized annual increases observed in both property types” of homes and condominiums, Elliman real estate analysts concluded about Broward property sales. “New listings across all property types combined have increased annually at a rising rate for the past three months. The number of new contracts signed above the $1 million threshold has shown annual growth for the sixth time in seven months.”
Palm Beach County also witnessed an increase in annual home sales. But it was more modest than Broward with 321 single-family contracts signed in November. That’s a 27.9% hike over November 2024 when there were 251 closings. But the monthly sales were down in Palm Beach County, too. There were 347 closings in October meaning November’s sales posed a 7.49% drop on the monthly ledger.
Miami-Dade is still struggling in home sales, though, as the county has lagged behind its northern neighbors for most of the year. There were 406 home closings in Miami-Dade in November, a 30.6% decline from November 2024 when there were 585. The monthly comparison was also off for Miami-Dade as there were 487 homes sold in October, representing a 16.63% drop in sales.
Condominium sales, which have been struggling in much of South Florida this year, showed some improvement. There were 354 condos sold in Broward in November, a 41.6% jump from a year ago. Palm Beach posted 309 condo sales last month, a 33.2% increase from November 2024. Miami-Dade was the only South Florida county with a dip in condo sales with 406 closings in November, a 30.6% decline from a year ago.
The original College of Dentistry building was errected half a century ago at UF.
The University of Florida (UF) College of Dentistry building is undergoing major renovations and a multi-phase overhaul that will add more than 100,000 square feet to the facility.
UF officials announced this month that the 11-story college “dental tower” is undergoing waterproofing and insulation upgrades. There is also a modernization of key spaces in the existing building and a new building addition that will tack on a new area that will cover the 100,0000 of additional space. The original building was erected 50 years ago and the new additions and upgrades are expected to be completed in five years.
“This project represents the largest investment made by the state of Florida in a medical science building at any state university,” said Mori Hosseini, UF Board of Trustees Chair in a news release. “We fought for this because we understand what it will deliver for our community – for our students, our faculty and families across Florida.”
Some of the brick exterior of the original building is being removed. Crews are “sealing” the structure with work that is designed to prevent water intrusion. When that’s complete they’ll modernize the front of the building with a panel system that blend with the new addition. Work on that element is set to begin in August.
“The transformation helps ensure that the College of Dentistry remains at the forefront of academic distinction education, research and clinical innovation for decades to come,” said c, Dean of the college in Gainesville.
When completed, the College of Dentistry will see every room modernized within the building. Technological upgrades will accompany the physical overhaul as well.
“The College of Dentistry faculty and students deserve a space that allows them to focus on the patient, and the patients deserve a building that puts them at ease,” said UF Interim President Donald Landry. “The research done here will be transformative and add to the glory of this institution.”
Early voting is underway in Miami Beach ahead of a Dec. 9 runoff that will decide the city’s only open Commission seat — a head-to-head contest between Monica Matteo-Salinas and Monique Pardo Pope for the Group 1 seat.
Matteo-Salinas, a Democrat and longtime City Hall aide, finished first last month with 23.2% of the vote. Pardo Pope, a Republican lawyer, advanced with 20.1%.
They outpaced four other candidates competing to succeed outgoing Commissioner Kristen Rosen Gonzalez last month, but neither captured a large enough share of the vote — more than 50% — to win outright.
The runoff has sharpened into a choice between two contrasting résumés, platforms and campaign narratives along with a late-cycle revelation about Pardo Pope that has drawn national headlines.
Matteo-Salinas, 46, has consolidated establishment support for her campaign, which centers on a promise to work on expanding trolley service, increasing the city’s affordable housing index and establishing a new “water czar” position in the city, paid by resort taxes.
She’s earned endorsements from several local pols, including Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava, Miami Beach Commissioners Alex Fernandez, Laura Dominguez and Tanya Bhatt; and former Miami Beach Dan Gelber.
Groups backing her bid include the Miami Beach Fraternal Order of Police, LGBTQ groups SAVE Action PAC and Equality Florida Action PAC, and the public-safety-focused neighborhood group SOBESafe.
Pardo Pope, 45, has centered her messaging on public safety, investing in mental health, backing school choice initiatives, supporting homelessness services, encouraging “smart, thoughtful development” that preserves Miami Beach’s character while addressing flooding and roadway congestion, and alleviating cost-of-living issues for longtime residents and first-time homebuyers through “fair taxation.”
Though she has touted her guardian ad litem work as evidence of her temperament and commitment to service, that part of her record has drawn renewed scrutiny in recent weeks. A review of Pardo Pope’s case records with the Miami-Dade Clerk’s Office shows her listed as a guardian ad litem on just three cases — one of which she was discharged from after trying to get the mother in the case jailed.
She’s also been the subject of negative attention for omitting that her father was the convicted, Nazi-adoring serial killer Manuel Pardo, to whom she wrote several loving social media posts.
Pardo Pope has said that she forgave him in order to move forward with her life and asked voters to judge her on her own life and work.
Her backing includes the Miami-Dade Republican Party, Miami-Dade Commissioner René García, state Rep. Alex Rizo, former Miami Beach City Attorney Jose Smith, Miami Realtors PAC, the Venezuelan American Republican Club and Teach Florida PAC, a Jewish education group.
Two of her former Group 1 opponents, Daniel Ciraldo and Omar Gimenez, are also backing her.
Matteo-Salinas raised about $133,000 and spent $82,000 by Dec. 4. Pardo Pope raised about $190,000 — of which 29% was self-given — and spent close to $170,000.
Early voting runs through Sunday at four locations citywide. Election Day is Monday, Dec. 9.