ReportWire

Tag: city commission

  • After losing bid for Miami mayor, Joe Carollo says he won’t run for office again

    Miami Commissioner Joe Carollo speaks during a City of Miami mayoral debate hosted by the Downtown Neighbors Alliance at Hyatt Regency Miami on Tuesday, September 30, 2025, in Miami, Fla. Other candidates in attendance included former Miami-Dade Commissioner Eileen Higgins, former Commissioners Ken Russell and Alex Díaz de la Portilla, former Mayor Xavier Suarez and former City Manager Emilio T. Gonzalez.

    Miami Commissioner Joe Carollo speaks during a mayoral debate hosted by the Downtown Neighbors Alliance at Hyatt Regency Miami on Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2025.

    dvarela@miamiherald.com

    After his fourth-place loss in the crowded race for Miami mayor Tuesday, longtime City Commissioner Joe Carollo said he will not seek elected office again.

    “Today is the first day of my life. My future life,” Carollo told the Miami Herald Wednesday morning. “I’m 70 years old. I’m not going to be doing this again.”

    The development marks an end to a decades-long reign in City Hall for Carollo, who has also served twice as mayor. In recent years, his political brand has been marred by a maelstrom of litigation, most notoriously the lawsuit and resulting $63 million judgment that a jury awarded two Little Havana businessmen in 2023, finding that they were victims of a political retaliation campaign pushed by Carollo after they supported his opponent in 2017.

    Carollo’s tenure in local politics spans decades. He was first elected to the City Commission 46 years ago in 1979. He went on to be elected two more times to the commission before becoming mayor in 1996 and again in 1998. He lost his bid for reelection in 2001 but made a political comeback 16 years later in 2017, when he was elected to the District 3 commission seat that he’s occupied since.

    READ MORE: Dynasty city: How three Miami families may extend their decades of political power

    Carollo, now term-limited on the commission, had long been teasing another run for mayor, although he didn’t formally enter the race until late September, months after his main opponents had begun actively campaigning.

    Miami-Dade County Commissioner Eileen Higgins and former Miami City Manager Emilio González were the top two vote-getters in the mayoral race Tuesday, securing 36% and 19%, respectively, to head to a Dec. 9 runoff. Carollo declined to say Wednesday which of the two he plans to vote for next month.

    While Carollo said he doesn’t plan to seek elected office, he’s not ready to leave politics entirely.

    “I’m not going to run for office, but I’m going to be involved in different ways at different levels,” Carollo said.

    While he failed to make the runoff for mayor, Carollo still has a few weeks left on the City Commission. His younger brother, Frank Carollo, is running to succeed Joe in the open District 3 seat but failed to get more than 50% of the vote Tuesday. That means Frank is also headed to a Dec. 9 runoff against Rolando Escalona, the general manager at Brickell’s Sexy Fish restaurant.

    Regardless of who wins, the dynamics in City Hall are bound to shift in the absence of one of Miami’s most polarizing politicians.

    “One thing’s for sure,” Carollo said. “You can’t blame me for anything anymore.”

    Follow More of Our Reporting on City of Miami

    Tess Riski covers Miami City Hall. She joined the Miami Herald in 2022 and has covered local politics throughout Miami-Dade County. She is a graduate of Columbia Journalism School’s Toni Stabile Center for Investigative Journalism.
    Support my work with a digital subscription

    Tess Riski

    Source link

  • Polarizing L.A. police official keeps post by default after City Council fails to vote

    A polarizing figure on the Los Angeles Police Commission will retain his seat despite having never received an approval vote from the City Council.

    Erroll Southers, who previously served as president of the civilian panel that watches over the LAPD, has taken criticism for what critics say is his unwillingness to provide oversight of police Chief Jim McDonnell, while also facing renewed scrutiny in recent months for his past counterterrorism studies in Israel.

    For the record:

    9:33 a.m. Oct. 1, 2025An earlier version of this story reported that Erroll Southers’ nomination was not on the City Council’s agenda last week. Southers was on the agenda but the council continued the matter and took no vote.

    New members of any city commission must typically be approved by a City Council vote within 45 days of their nomination. Mayor Karen Bass put forward Southers in mid-August, but his first scheduled vote was delayed because he was traveling, and the council continued the matter without explanation at a meeting Friday in Van Nuys.
    Now that his 45-day window has elapsed, multiple officials told The Times that city rules allow Southers to continue in the position by default for a full five-year term because he was already serving on an interim basis.

    Around City Hall, news of the council’s inaction set off speculation about whether it was the result of a scheduling mix-up — or because Southers’ backers didn’t believe he could get enough votes.

    Failing to vote on a member of one of city’s most important and high-profile commissions is almost unheard of, said Zev Yaroslavsky, a former councilman and L.A. County supervisor now at UCLA.

    “They have responsibility to confirm or not confirm,” he said of the council. “I never understood why you would campaign for office, as hard as you campaign to get there, and not vote on something that’s as important to the public.”

    Appointed by the mayor, police commissioners act much like a corporate board of directors, setting the LAPD policies, approving its budget and providing oversight, including reviews of officer shootings and other serious uses of force.

    Southers, 68, has been a member of the panel since 2023, when Bass picked him to serve out the term of a departing commissioner.

    A former FBI agent and Santa Monica cop turned top security official at USC, Southers helped lead the nationwide search for the next LAPD chief. The position eventually went to McDonnell — who like Southers served as director of the school’s Safe Communities Institute.

    His backers say that Southers has been committed to his role, participating in numerous listening sessions with Angelenos to learn what qualities they wanted in a police chief. He has also become a regular presence at LAPD recruitment events and graduations.

    Zach Seidl, a mayoral spokesperson, praised Southers for his stewardship of the commission, saying the career lawman “brings deep knowledge of the police department’s operations, a commitment to the continued development of policies that further transparency and accountability, and trusted relationships with community members and law enforcement.”

    Teresa Sánchez-Gordon, a retired L.A. County judge, replaced Southers as commission president last month, after he served more than a year in the role.

    But more than any other commissioner, Southers has accumulated a loud chorus of detractors who oppose keeping him in the key oversight role.

    Although it has long been part of his resume, Southers’ work in the mid-2000s in Israel has especially become a lighting rod due to the ongoing crisis in Gaza.

    Last month, a United Nations commission accused Israel of committing genocide against Palestinians in Gaza in retaliation for the Hamas militant attacks that left 1,200 dead and 251 others kidnapped on Oct. 7, 2023.

    Israel’s military campaign has so far killed more than 66,000 people, the vast majority of them civilians, according to Gaza health officials and international aid groups.

    Although Southers has said little publicly about the conflict, he has previously described traveling to Israel and studying with the Israel Defense Forces to learn about anti-terrorism strategies for his academic work.

    His opponents have argued his writings suggest that authorities should use an individual’s public support for controversial causes as a potential warning sign of extremism. Such arguments, they say, can be used to justify the criminalization of minority groups or silence dissent.

    Southers weathered calls for his resignation from the commission last year after he was among the USC officials responsible for clearing encampments occupied by pro-Palestinian protesters on the school’s campus.

    Others have focused on his oversight of McDonnell. Far too often, critics say, he has let the chief off the hook after recent controversies. Most recently Southers and his fellow commissioners have faced calls to put more checks on aggressive behavior by LAPD officers toward journalists and nonviolent protesters.

    Shootings by police have also been a point of contention with Southers. LAPD officers opened fire 31 times in the first nine months of this year, already surpassing the total number of shootings in 2024.

    The commission ordered the department to present a report on the shootings, but that was not nearly enough to satisfy Greg “Baba” Akili, a longtime civil rights advocate with Black Lives Matter-Los Angeles who has frequently spoken out against Southers’ nomination.

    As commission president, he said, Southers seemed more willing to shut down public speakers at the board’s meetings than to question the department’s narrative of recent events.

    “It’s like having a member of the police force on the commission,” Akili said of Southers. “We don’t want to see just Black faces in high places: We want people who actually … uplift the public.”

    Libor Jany

    Source link