Miami Beach Republican Rep. Fabián Basabe continues to rack up endorsements for his re-election effort in House District 106, now earning nods from every elected official in North Bay Village.
It’s the second municipality Basabe represents whose elected leaders are all supporting him.
All five of the North Bay Village’s voter-chosen local servants are endorsing Basabe, citing his responsiveness, collaboration, delivery of state appropriations and attention to the municipality’s needs.
Mayor Rachel Streitfeld, a Democrat, called Basabe’s state-level support for North Bay Village “invaluable” and “evident from the start.” She said in a letter that even before Basabe’s election in 2022, he was a fixture at Village Commission meetings.
“Since our voters sent you to Tallahassee, nothing has changed. You are still present in our community on a regular basis (and) your staff make themselves available to our constituents on a regular basis,” she said.
“You answer the phone every time I call and engage with me on substantive issues of statewide policy and local impacts. When I come to Tallahassee, you make sure to introduce me to your colleagues who control the outcomes we care about most. … Finally, you have helped us secure record grant and appropriation funding … for critical infrastructure projects.”
Vice Mayor Goran Cuk, a Republican, and Commissioners Doris Acosta, Andy Daro and Richard Chervony — two independents and a Democrat, respectively — heaped similar praise on Basabe.
Cuk called Basabe “accessible, engaged, and consistently focused on solving problems rather than scoring points” in a letter that suggested people with presumptions about the lawmaker should meet him and develop their own opinions.
“When people take the time to get to know him, they see the truth. He is a unifier who wants to bring people and parties back together,” Cuk wrote. “Our experience working with him in Tallahassee has been remarkable. From the first day, it felt like having the keys to the members club. … We have never had this kind of relationship with state leadership before, and it exists because Fabián makes sure it does.”
Acosta said Basabe’s focus on local issues and willingness to work with North Bay Village “have contributed positively to the progress of several of our local initiatives,” while Daro highlighted Basabe’s “genuine, hands-on approach.”
“He listens, follows through, and treats everyone with respect,” Daro wrote in a letter. “Working alongside Fabián in Tallahassee has been both productive and motivating. He’s opened doors for us at the state level, strengthened relationships with leadership, and helped move important projects forward.”
Chervony, whose endorsement Florida Politics flagged last month, called Basabe “a constant and accessible force for our community.” He also credited Basabe, as did Cuk, for having poise in the face of troubling accusations.
In late October, the Miami Herald reported about a man who claimed Basabe raped him in 2003. Basabe is also representing himself against a defamation lawsuit brought by a pair of former House employees who accused him of sexual harassment. Two House probes into those staffers’ complaints found “no evidence” and “inconclusive” evidence of wrongdoing by him.
“Watching how Fabián responded during that period changed my perspective (about him) entirely,” Chervony wrote. “He never retaliated, never lost focus, and continued doing his job with dignity and professionalism. That kind of composure under pressure is the definition of leadership.”
The endorsements from elected leaders in North Bay Village, a three-island community of some 8,200 residents, add those from every elected leader from Golden Beach.
He has also won support from Reps. Alex Rizo of Hialeah and Jose Alvarez of Kissimmee, Miami-Dade Tax Collector Dariel Fernandez, Aventura City Commissioner Gustavo Blachman, Bal Harbour Council member Buzzy Sklar and Miami Beach running legend Robert “Raven” Kraft, who said Basabe’s actions last year helped save him from homelessness.
Rizo, Fernandez, Blachman, Sklar and Kraft are Republicans. Alvarez is a Democrat. Golden Beach’s leadership has a political blend similar to North Bay Village’s.
Basabe said in a statement that the letters from North Bay Village “speak for themselves: leadership, accessibility, integrity, the support we secured, and the respect we’ve built through real collaboration.”
“I’m grateful for strong women in leadership. I’m grateful for independent thinkers. And I’m grateful for people with enough courage and clarity to do what is right even when political interference and pressure tell them to act otherwise,” he said.
“These officials put their residents, their businesses, and their integrity before party lines. … People can still rise above noise, misinformation, and division. People can choose what’s good, what’s true, and what’s productive for their community. This is unity with purpose.”
Two Democrats have filed to run against Basabe: former Miami-Dade School Board member Lucia Báez-Geller, whom he has accused of lodging “false, malicious” accusations against him, and lawyer Ashley Litwin Diego, who has enlisted the services of influential consultant Christian Ulvert.
The 2026 Primary is Aug. 18, followed by the General Election on Nov. 3.