Miami-Dade County Commission Race Primer

Luis Andre Gazitua
June 10, 2020
Miami-Dade County Commission Race Primer

Ladies and Gentlemen, Start Your Engines! Five of the 13 sitting commissioners are required to leave office in November, as …

Ladies and Gentlemen, Start Your Engines!

Five of the 13 sitting commissioners are required to leave office in November, as term limits voters approved eight years ago are only now triggering required exits for a board where incumbents rarely lose elections.

District 1:For 16 years, Barbara Jordan has held the commission seat that covers Miami Gardens. Term limitspassed by county voters in 2012restricted her and other incumbents to a pair of consecutive four-year terms after that, so she must leave office in November.

Running to succeed her are Miami Gardens MayorOliver Gilbert; andSybrina Fulton, a social-justice advocate and former county housing employee who rose to national prominence after the 2012 fatal shooting of her teenage son,Trayvon Martin, by a neighborhood watch captain. With only two candidates, the race for a district that includes parts of Opa-locka will be decided in August.

District 3:Incumbent Audrey Edmonson, also the commission’s chairwoman, must leave office after 14 years representing a district that includes parts of downtown Miami and neighborhoods in the northern part of the city. Running to replace her are:Brian Dennis, a longtime columnist for the Miami Times newspaper; Miami City CommissionerKeon Hardemon;Monester Lee-Kinsler,founder of the Leap of Faith non-profit; retired police officerEddie Lewis;Tisa McGhee, an assistant professor at Barry University’s Social Work school; andGespie Metellus, director of the Sant La Haitian Neighborhood Center.

District 5:This district spanning Biscayne Bay includes Miami’s Little Havana neighborhood and South Beach in Miami Beach. IncumbentEileen Higginswon the seat in aspecial electiontwo years ago when then-Commissioner Bruno Barreiro resigned to run for Congress. She faces two challengers: former school board memberRenier Diaz de la Portillaand general contractorMiguel Soliman.

District 7:Suarez won a special election in 2011 when Gimenez gave up this southern Miami seat to run for mayor and replaced recalled incumbent Carlos Alvarez during his final year in office. (Gimenez went on to win full terms in 2012 and 2016.)

The district includes Pinecrest, Key Biscayne and parts of Coral Gables and Miami, where Suarez served as mayor almost 20 years before his son took office.

Running to succeed Suarez are former Pinecrest mayorCindy Lerner, former school board memberRaquel Regalado,Michael Rosenberg, founder of the Pets Trust advocacy group, and Miami Gardens police officerRafael “Ralph” Suarez.

District 9:Commissioner Dennis Moss is one of two commissioners to retain his seat since single-member districts were created in the early 1990s as part of a court ruling that the county’s prior system of at-large seats left minority voters without representation. His required departure will leave District 10’s Javier Souto as the longest-serving commissioner, having also won his seat at the creation of the modern commission.

Four candidates are running to represent District 9, a South Dade area that includes Florida City, Homestead, and the neighborhoods of Goulds and Perrine. The candidates are pastorMark Coats;Johnny Farias, an elected member of a Community Council zoning board that covers part of the district; lawyerMarlon Hill; former Homestead city council memberElvis Maldonado, who gave up his seat for the commission race; andKionne McGhee, an outgoing state representative who served as Democratic leader in the Florida House.

District 11:Though he’s a veteran commissioner, incumbentJoe Martinezis still eligible for another term since there was a four-year break between his two stints on the board. Martinez gave up his seat representing the West Kendall area in 2012 for a failed run for mayor against Gimenez, and reclaimed it in 2016. Challenging Martinez are former state representativeRobert AsencioandCristhian David Mancera Mejia, who holds a Colombian law license and has a practice that focuses on Colombians living abroad.

District 13:Bovo took his seat in 2011, when the recall election that ousted then-mayor Alvarez also removed incumbent Natacha Seijas. The district includes Hialeah and parts of Miami Lakes. Running to replace Bovo are former state senatorRene GarciaandAdrian Jesus Jimenez, a law firm employee.

Hanks, Douglas. “Filing deadline sets crowded ballot for Miami-Dade mayor, commission seats.” Miami Herald, JUNE 09, 2020

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