The race for Miami Mayor is on track to be far less crowded come 6 p.m. Saturday.
That’s the deadline to qualify for what is now a 13-candidate contest to succeed term-limited Mayor Francis Suarez.
As of 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, just five candidates — Miami-Dade Commissioner Eileen Higgins, former City Manager Emilio González, former City Commissioner KenRussell, entrepreneur Christian Cevallos and Laura Anderson, an affiliate of the Socialist Workers Party — have qualified.
Another candidate, Max Martinez, who placed second in the 2021 race for Mayor, has withdrawn from the contest.
Higgins, a Democrat, is alone so far in qualifying by petition. Her campaign submitted more than 3,000 signatures last month from Miami residents, well over the 2,048 required, to forgo having to pay a fee.
On Wednesday, Higgins announced she had officially qualified. The city’s election webpage hasn’t yet been updated to show that.
“As your County Commissioner, I’ve delivered results that matter — building affordable housing, making neighborhoods safer, and helping small businesses thrive,” Higgins said in a statement. “Now I’m running for Mayor to bring that same focus and integrity to City Hall.”
Cevallos, González, Russell and Anderson — two Republicans, a Democrat and a no-party candidate, respectively — each paid a $1,070 qualifying fee.
Russell, who unsuccessfully ran for Congress in 2022, was first to do so Sept. 5. In a statement, he accused Miami leaders of prioritizing politics over the needs of their constituents.
“Miami now faces the worst affordable housing crisis in the country — the gap between what we earn and what it costs to live here is larger than in any other city,” he said. “That’s nothing to celebrate. It’s something we must confront and fix.”
González, who ran Miami’s operations from late 2017 to early 2020 after stints leading Miami International Airport and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, qualified by payment Tuesday.
He called it “a victory for the people of Miami” and pointed to his successful lawsuit that blocked city officials from delaying this year’s election to 2026, a move that would have given them an extra year in office without voter approval.
“When political insiders tried to strip away your right to vote, I fought back — and won,” he said in a statement. “Now, I’m taking that same fight to City Hall to end corruption, put residents first, and restore integrity to our government.”
Cevallos qualified late Wednesday afternoon. Anderson qualified Sept. 8. Unlike Higgins, González and Russell, she has virtually no campaign footprint online.
(L-R) Christian Cevallos, Emilio González, Eileen Higgins, Ken Russell and Laura Anderson (not pictured) have qualified for the Miami Mayor’s race. Eight other active candidates haven’t, and at least two other contenders have yet to file. Images via the candidates.
Others running include Republicans Alyssa Crocker, June Savage and Alex Díaz de la Portilla, a former Miami Commissioner; Democrats Ellijah Bowdre, Ijamyn Gray and Michael Hepburn; and no-party candidates Kenneth DeSantis and Xavier Suarez, a former Miami Mayor and the father of Francis Suarez.
Martinez, a Democrat who took about 11.6% of the vote when he challenged Francis Suarez four years ago, dropped out of this year’s race on Tuesday after spending $3,000 on marketing materials. He had run an almost exclusively self-funded campaign.
Reached by phone Wednesday, Martinez, who runs an athletics agency, said he couldn’t justify spending his or anybody else’s money on a contest he viewed as being actively engineered to favor a select few candidates.
“I’m not going to fight with my money so dang hard to speak over other people,” he said before rattling off a list of candidates he viewed as having sizable electoral advantages, like Díaz de la Portilla, Higgins, González, Russell and Suarez, and yet-to-file contenders like Miami Commissioner Joe Carollo and former Kaseya CEO Fred Voccola, for whom text messages have been sent to Miami voters in recent weeks.
Martinez added that he’d been “offered things” from both Republican and Democratic candidates in the race, but turned them down. He didn’t elaborate.
“It’s crazy, by the way, because I never asked for any of that,” he said. “I only wanted to make my hometown a better place.”
Voters will weigh in on two other races.
For the District 3 seat on the City Commission, which Carollo currently holds, six candidates — Yvonne Bayona, Brenda Betancourt, Rolando Escalona, Rob Piper, Fayez Tanous and Denise Turros — have qualified. Two others, Oscar Alejandro and former Commissioner Frank Carollo, the current Commissioner’s younger brother, have filed but haven’t yet qualified.
And in the District 5 race, incumbent Commissioner Christine King and two people challenging her, Marion Brown and Frederick Bryant, have all qualified.
Miami’s election is Nov. 4. It’s technically nonpartisan. If no candidate in a given race receives more than 50% of the vote, the top two vote-getters will compete in a runoff.
Last Call – A prime-time read of what’s going down in Florida politics.
First Shot
Former House Speaker Paul Renner is formalizing his push for the Governor’s Mansion with a new organizing arm focused on women voters.
Renner’s campaign just announced the creation of a statewide steering committee for its “Women for Renner Coalition,” assembling dozens of conservative activists, educators, business leaders and faith-based advocates to amplify women’s voices supporting his gubernatorial bid.
The coalition, the campaign said, is designed to mobilize women across political and professional lines around issues. Among them: parental rights, public safety, faith, economic opportunity and what the campaign describes as “principled leadership.”
Renner said in a statement Tuesday that the coalition will serve as both a values-driven and operational component of his campaign.
“Women are the heart and voice of families and communities,” Renner said. “I am honored to have the growing support of strong, dedicated female leaders that will ensure their concerns remain front and center — especially when it comes to protecting faith, American exceptionalism, parental rights, a prosperous economy, and defending the principles of freedom that guide us.”
The “Women for Renner Coalition” will function as an internal organizing network, encouraging women across Florida to share personal stories, engage voters and advocate on key campaign issues. The campaign said the group will also work to elevate women’s perspectives in policymaking and community engagement.
Adriana Renner, the candidate’s wife, said she has seen her husband’s commitment to families and praised the coalition as a vehicle for advancing what the campaign calls a “Florida First agenda.”
“The article published early this morning is a disingenuously framed hit piece on me and the finest President, White House staff, and Cabinet in history.”
— White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, on a controversial Vanity Fair profile.
Put it on the Tab
Look to your left, then look to your right. If you see one of these people at your happy hour haunt, flag down the bartender and put one of these on your tab. Recipes included, just in case the Cocktail Codex fell into the well.
UWF Ph.D. student Valeria Martin is getting an I’m on Fire for a good reason — CalFireSeg-50, a dataset that will improve how damage from wildfires is mapped.
The Florida League of Cities gets an Obvious Bridge for its study noting that eliminating property taxes would hit rural communities hardest.
Breakthrough Insights
Tune In
Miami tips off against FIU
The Miami Hurricanes try to stay undefeated at home as they host Florida International tonight in a South Florida basketball matchup (7 p.m. ET, ACC Network Extra).
Miami (9-2) has won four straight games, including a 104-79 victory over Louisiana-Monroe on Saturday. In the game, Malik Reneau led the Hurricanes with 22 points while grabbing 10 rebounds. Ernest Udeh Jr. added 14 points and 15 rebounds in the win.
For the season, Reneau leads the team, averaging 20.4 points per game, while Udeh, who started his career at Kansas before transferring to TCU and finally to Miami, leads the squad in rebounding.
FIU (5-3) comes in on a three-game winning streak, including an 88-65 win over Jacksonville University 10 days ago. The Panthers have played only two games outside Florida and will not leave the state again until Jan. 7, when they face Jacksonville State in Alabama.
The Panthers are led by Corey Stephenson, who averages 17.5 points and eight rebounds per game, both team highs. Stephenson transferred from Cal State Bakersfield to FIU ahead of this season.
After tonight’s game, Miami has one more nonconference opponent on the schedule before ACC play begins. The Hurricanes will host North Florida on Sunday and then open conference play at home against Pitt on Dec. 30.
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Last Call is published by Peter Schorsch, assembled and edited by Phil Ammann and Drew Wilson, with contributions from the staff of Florida Politics.
Florida’s behavioral health safety net system, overseen by seven regional Managing Entities, ensures that uninsured and underinsured Floridians can access essential behavioral health services regardless of their ability to pay. More than $1 billion goes into this robust system of care, which meets individuals’ acute and long-term behavioral health needs in both crisis and non-crisis settings and supports housing, transportation, and employment.
A recent statutorily required audit of the Managing Entities and the safety net system of care found no significant instances of Fraud, Waste or Abuse, proving the accountability, transparency and strength of this system.
House Bill 633, passed during the last Legislative Session, requires an independent audit of the Managing Entities. Last week, the Department of Children and Families presented it at a Committee meeting to share the audit results.
Bill Hardin, the Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Office of Substance Abuse & Mental Health, remarked that the audit identified commendable practices and identified enhancements within the system.
During his presentation, Mr. Hardin emphasized that Managing Entities statewide operate at an administrative rate of less than 3% of the total allocations in appropriations and grants totaling $1.2 billion.
He then noted that commendable practices included responsiveness, which is due entirely to the Managing Entities’ past and ongoing transparency and efficiency. This responsiveness facilitated the efficient execution of the audit.
The auditors also noted highly engaged leadership teams among the Managing Entities and overwhelming support from behavioral health providers in the Managing Entity Services network, as indicated by anonymous surveys.
While there were no significant findings of waste, fraud and abuse, areas for improvement within certain processes were identified. Each Managing Entity has independent findings, enabling them to continue enhancing the behavioral health safety net system.
House Bill 633 also called for the streamlined collection and reporting of essential data that shows significant outcomes, services and the return on investment in the state’s behavioral health safety net system. Managing Entities have developed a dashboard to comply with this requirement, and it is now on the Department of Children and Families website.
While Florida’s Managing Entities operate with extreme efficiency at a statewide 3% administrative rate, additional administrative resources will enable them to invest in the recommended enhancements.
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Natalie Kelly is CEO of the Florida Association of Managing Entities.
AT&T is expanding its 5G network in Florida and increasing service speeds.
The company has added 40 new cell sites in the Sunshine State in the past three months and provided 200 upgrades to expand 5G mobile phone and data coverage across Florida. Those upgrades are being provided to residents using data for computers and mobile phones, as well as for businesses. The public safety network known as FirstNet is also being upgraded as part of the AT&T project.
“Bringing these new sites online reflects our commitment to invest in the infrastructure that keeps Floridians connected,” said Joe York, President of AT&T Florida.
“Every new site we activate strengthens the experience for the people who live and work here while also giving first responders on FirstNet the dedicated coverage and capacity they rely on. We’re proud to continue expanding our network in these communities and to support the critical work happening across Florida to improve public safety, economic opportunity, and quality of life.”
The Florida AT&T enhancements will also bring Band 14 spectrum to the impacted areas. Band 14 is the high-quality data spectrum dedicated to FirstNet. It’s the only nationwide network for communications for public safety agencies. Band 14 is used in emergencies and utilized exclusively by the agencies subscribing to FirstNet.
FirstNet was established by Congress in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks in 2001. It was built by AT&T in a public-private partnership with the FirstNet Authority for nationwide communications for public safety agencies.
Between 2020 and 2024, AT&T poured $5.5 billion into wireless networks in Florida to enhance reliability coverage and speed for both residential and business services.
The new AT&T cell sites are located in about two dozen counties, including Brevard, Broward, Charlotte, Collier, Columbia, Duval, Flagler, Franklin, Hillsborough, Jefferson, Lake, Manatee, Marion, Miami-Dade, Orange, Osceola, Pasco, Polk, Sarasota, St. Johns, Volusia and Washington.