Do election results across the country Tuesday mean Democrats have a greater shot winning congressional races in South Florida next year?
Candidate Richard Lamondin thinks so, but says his party can’t treat any prediction as a given this cycle. He thinks Republicans may have done that, believing Latin American voters had permanently shifted toward Republicans in the 2024 election.
“What people need to realize, one, is that the Latin American people from Latin America are not a monolith, and two, that no political party can take voters for granted,” Lamondin said. “I think the Democratic Party, for a long time, did that nationally as well.”
He is one of three Democrats raising money to unseat U.S. Rep. María Elvira Salazar, a Coral Gables Republican, in Florida’s 27th Congressional District. Lamondin reported almost $304,000 cash on hand at the end of the third quarter, compared to Democrat Robin Peguero’s more than $223,000. A third Democratic candidate, Alexander Fornino, reported just over $2,000 in the bank.
As a Democrat in Miami, Lamondin is acutely aware that not every Latino community in the country has a tradition of supporting Democrats. The Cuban American community for decades elected mostly Republicans to Congress, including Salazar, who unseated Democratic U.S. Rep. Donna Shalala in 2020.
But Lamondin said Miami has been hurt by Trump’s policies and by Republican control in Washington. As a business owner — he co-founded ecofi with brother Lawrence in 2012 — Lamondin believes he’s the best messenger for delivering a compelling economic message in the district.
“We have a large business community in Miami, particularly small-business owners, that are being hurt. They’re being hurt by the cost-of-living crisis,” he said.
“They’re being hurt by the tariffs, including my business. I’ve had a hiring freeze this entire year because these tariffs have caused chaos. In my company, we’ve had some of our materials go up 40%. And I think that I can speak to a lot of the issues as a father of a 3-year-old that many of us are going through, which is, it’s getting harder to raise a family in Miami.”
His campaign took note when Salazar after Tuesday’s elections posted a video raising alarms about Republicans losing Latino support following drubbings for the party in Governor races in Virginia and New Jersey.
“To my fellow Republicans: Let’s act now and embrace the community that shares our values, before our chance is gone for good,” Salazar said in the video.
But Lamondin said Democrats need to win votes by discussing economic issues. Indeed, he thinks his party will find success talking about kitchen table issues instead of being bogged down in an argument about community values.
“We are already running a campaign that is vastly different than the campaigns Democratic candidates have run before,” he said. “On top of that, I’m a job creator. I create hundreds of jobs, and in a town where people tag anyone left of the right as a socialist or a communist, I think that’s an attack that will continue to fall in deaf ears for someone like me who has literally lived a capitalist American dream my entire life.”
The current political climate is one where Democrats can break through the typical divisions in South Florida, he said.
“The issues that we are facing transcend any ethnic or racial lines. We are all dealing with the same affordability crisis,” he said.
“We are all struggling to make sure that our kids have the right opportunities to make it in a way that people can start a business, that they can raise a family, they could send their kids to a good school. The fact of the matter is, the real lines being drawn here are whether you live in an area of the city that has that type of access to opportunity resources, good schools. I think that right now, there’s a huge gap in Miami between the wealthy people that have been coming in or there and the working people who have been leaving Miami.”