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Tag: Miami mayor race

  • Trump-endorsed candidate for Miami mayor shrugs off Trump’s Mamdani moment

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    U.S. President Donald Trump meets with New York City mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, D.C., on Nov. 21, 2025. (Yuri Gripas/ABACAPRESS.COM/TNS)

    U.S. President Donald Trump meets with New York City mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, D.C., on Nov. 21, 2025. (Yuri Gripas/ABACAPRESS.COM/TNS)

    TNS

    On the campaign trail to be elected Miami’s next mayor, Trump-endorsed candidate Emilio González has warned about what he sees as the creeping scourge of socialism. But one day after Donald Trump shared a glowing moment in the oval office with democratic socialist New York Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani, González said he wasn’t questioning the president.

    “Clearly, New York City is an important city and I’m sure the president meets with all sorts of people,” González told the Miami Herald Saturday. “I’ve got my race to concentrate on.”

    In a chummy post-meeting press conference Friday, Donald Trump said some of Mamdani’s “ideas really are the same ideas that I have.”

    When a reporter asked Trump Friday about calling Mamdani a communist — as he did multiple times during a speech earlier this month in Miami — Trump said, “He’s got views out there, but who knows. I mean, we’re going to see what works.”

    For González, those ideas are a nonstarter: “We won’t be trying them in Miami, that’s for sure.”

    Trump’s warm moment with Mamdani – one advisor to the mayor-elect called it a “bromance” – could make for awkward politics for Florida Republicans, most immediately in Miami’s mayoral race. The Florida GOP, and Republican politicians around the country, have spent the last three weeks pointing to Mamdani as a boogeyman-to-come if voters elect Democrats, even in races like Miami’s thousands of miles away.

    “The Democrats are trying to elect a “democratic socialist” in the City of Miami of all places,” said Lt. Gov. Jay Collins, referring to mayoral candidate Eileen Higgins — who does not identify as a democratic socialist. Higgins’ campaign manager Christian Ulvert called the comments “ridiculous” and “scare tactics.” Exile politics have long influenced elections in Miami, which has been led by a Cuban-American mayor the last three decades.

    Collins is not alone, however, in trying to inject Mamdani into local politics. Gov. Ron DeSantis, Congressman Byron Donalds, Texas Senator Ted Cruz and Trump himself have all given speeches in recent weeks in Miami denouncing Mamdani as a threat to Florida.

    “Democrats are so extreme that Miami will soon be the refuge of those fleeing communism in New York City,” Trump said the day after Mamdani was elected. Trump’s face-to-face meeting, however, painted a much different picture. “I think he’s going to surprise some conservative people, actually. And some very liberal people, he won’t surprise them, because they already like him,” Trump said Friday.

    Robert Wolf, a Barack Obama ally who consulted Mamdani ahead of his meeting with Trump and called the result a “Trump-Mamdani bromance,” said Mamdani intentionally focused on affordability during his meeting with Trump to find common ground. “They both have a bit of a populist slant,” Wolf said on Fox News Saturday. “Their focus is all on affordability. So if you look at that as kind of what we spoke about in our prep, there was some sort of confidence that it would go well.”

    James Fishback, an anti-immigrant, hard-right candidate teasing a Florida’s governor’s race run, told the Herald earlier this month he too admired Mamdani’s focus on affordability — which could add another layer to how Florida Republicans message about Mamdani in the coming months, if he jumps in the race.

    “Zohran and I disagree on the solutions, but if there’s one thing, one single thing that I agree with Zohran Mamdani on, it’s that affordability is the number one priority for Americans,” Fishback said. In Congress, ahead of Mamdani’s meeting with the president, Miami Republicans tried to convey a very different message than the one Trump eventually did. The House took a floor vote Friday on a resolution sponsored by Miami Congresswoman María Elvira Salazar “denouncing the horrors of socialism.” “The recent election of a self-proclaimed, anti-American socialist mayor in one of the country’s major cities underscores the urgency of condemning socialism,” Miami Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart said on social media Friday ahead of the vote.

    “NYC elects a proud SOCIALIST,” Salazar said. “This is why we must remember socialism’s record of death and destruction.”

    Her office did not respond to a request for comment after Trump’s glowing comments about the mayor-elect.

    Claire Heddles

    Miami Herald

    Claire Heddles is the Miami Herald’s senior political correspondent. She previously covered national politics and Congress from Washington, D.C at NOTUS. She’s also worked as a public radio reporter covering local government and education in East Tennessee and Jacksonville, Florida. 

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    Claire Heddles

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

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    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.”

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    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.
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    Tess Riski

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