- Thursday, July 3, 2025

It is not often you see a clear case of a stolen election, but that’s what the Miami City Commission has voted to do. Here’s what you need to know about the Miami election cancellation controversy:

The commission vote

City panel decides to postpone scheduled elections:



  • Miami City Commission voted 3-2 to punt elections until next year
  • Mayor and commissioners were supposed to be up for reelection in November
  • Decision defies city charter that says elections held in odd-numbered years
  • Two commissioners and term-limited mayor get another year without voter approval

The legal challenges

State officials and candidates push back:

  • Emilio Gonzalez filed lawsuit as declared mayoral candidate
  • State Attorney General James Uthmeier issued opinion requiring voter referendum
  • Any change to election date would require city voter approval
  • Gov. Ron DeSantis has signaled he backs attorney general

The resident backlash

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Immigrant community compares vote to authoritarianism:

  • Rammel Guzman, 49, compared vote unfavorably to Hugo Chavez
  • “I was born in Venezuela, and in 1999 the constitution was reformed by Chávez”
  • “Even he put it to a vote — we need to do better than that”
  • Another constituent called change “voter suppression”

The commissioners’ defense

Panel justifies postponement with turnout and cost arguments:

  • Defended move as way to boost turnout and save money
  • New election date will coincide with federal elections in even-numbered years
  • Commissioners not elected as partisans though two supporters considered Democrats
  • Miami’s city attorney said date change is legal
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The mayor’s role

Francis Suarez must decide whether to veto:

  • Mayor now must decide whether to veto the change
  • Miami Herald reported he was lobbying behind scenes to push plan through
  • Suarez’s office didn’t respond to inquiry for story
  • Mayor completing second two-term stint in office

The affected officials

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Specific commissioners benefit from postponement:

  • Commission Chair Christine King voted for change affecting her own reelection
  • King was due for reelection this year, gave herself extra year
  • Commissioner Joe Carollo voted against change despite being term-limited
  • Carollo cannot seek reelection but believed eyeing mayoral run

Gonzalez’s military background

Candidate frames issue as democracy defense:

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  • “I spent my entire adult career in the military defending democracy around the world”
  • “Now I’ve got to come over here and defend democracy in my hometown”
  • “This is not about me. This is about our ability to vote”
  • Gonzalez sued to block change unless it goes to voters

The precedent concern

Lawsuit plaintiff warns of future cancellations:

  • Gonzalez said if commission prevails, little stops next election cancellation
  • Vote underscores sense that city government captured by corruption
  • “I refuse to just sit on my hands and say, ’Oh well, that’s how Miami is’”
  • Candidate argues change sets dangerous precedent
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The term limit changes

Commission also backs lifetime restrictions:

  • City commissioners currently limited to two consecutive terms
  • Can run again after one-term break
  • Commission backed change to lifetime two-term limit
  • Did call for putting that change to voters in referendum

The gubernatorial threat

DeSantis has power to remove local officials:

  • Governor has shown no reluctance to fire local officials
  • Acts when he feels officials violating terms of office
  • State supreme court has upheld his power to remove officials
  • Suarez faces potential action from governor

The broader context

Miami City operates within larger governmental structure:

  • Miami City is part of broader Miami-Dade County
  • County also has its own mayor separate from city
  • Other South Florida cities changed dates by commission vote
  • City attorney pointed to precedents for date changes

Read more:

Cancel culture: Miami nixes mayor’s election, residents fume over “voter suppression”

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