Miami Herald (Sunday)

DIAZ TO LEAD STATE DEMOCRATS

■ As Florida Democratic Party chairman, the former Miami mayor must prepare the party for 2022 races against Gov. Ron DeSantis and Sen. Marco Rubio.

- BY DAVID SMILEY dsmiley@miamiheral­d.com

Former Miami Mayor Manny Diaz was elected on Saturday to lead the Florida Democratic Party, a job a friend referred to as the most thankless role there is.

Shortly after Florida Democrats were drubbed up and down the ballot in November, ex-Miami Mayor Manny Diaz phoned a former chief of staff and asked why he wasn’t part of a group urging Diaz to seek the position of state party chairman.

“I said, ‘Frankly, I wouldn’t wish this job on my worst enemy,’” former Democratic state Rep. Javier Fernandez recalled in a recent interview. “It’s the most thankless job in Florida politics.”

And now it belongs to Diaz.

On Saturday, Democratic activists chose Diaz, 66,

as their new chairman, picking the former twoterm Miami mayor to lead a wounded party in the nation’s biggest political battlegrou­nd. He now has just a few months to prepare for the start of the 2022 campaign season, when Democrats will try to unseat U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio and Gov. Ron DeSantis, and win back flippable seats in Congress and the Florida Legislatur­e.

“Our Florida Democratic Party is at a crossroads. While Democrats all over the nation made gains, we continue to lose ground. We continue to lose elections. When we lose, all Floridians suffer,” Diaz said Saturday as he and two other candidates addressed party voters in a video conference before the vote. “I do not believe in a fate that will fall upon us no matter what we do. I believe in a fate that will fall upon us if we do nothing.”

Diaz, who is CubanAmeri­can, will face immediate challenges, starting in his backyard, where many Hispanic voters rejected Democrats as socialists in November and turned to President Donald Trump.

The state party lost ground in the 2020 elections, as voters handed the GOP a greater majority in the Florida Legislatur­e and sent more Republican­s to Congress. Florida Republican­s continued last year to best Democrats in voter registrati­on. And Democrats were embarrasse­d this summer when it turned out they had solicited and received a federal paycheck protection program loan intended for small businesses.

The Florida Democratic Party entered the new year cash-poor, and has also been weakened in recent years by the exodus of donors, activists and lawmakers who have split off to run their own political organizati­ons, meaning Diaz will need to coordinate with a network of operators with their own agendas. And he’ll need to do work with segments of the party that coalesced this week behind his opponents — former state lawmaker Cynthia Chestnut and Hillsborou­gh County party Chairwoman Ione Townsend — in an unsuccessf­ul effort to block his ascension.

But Diaz’s new position returns him to national relevancy, and positions the one-time president of the U.S. Conference of Mayors as the chief liaison between Florida Democrats and President-elect Joe Biden’s Democratic administra­tion. His supporters — a group that includes billionair­e former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg and many of the state’s elected Democratic lawmakers — say he brings an unmatched resume and network of relationsh­ips to the role at a precarious time for the party.

“The bottom line is we’re in a real delicate state of affairs in Florida,” said Jorge Mursuli, a veteran civil rights activist who has frequently crossed paths with Diaz. “As progressiv­es, we’ve disappoint­ed stakeholde­rs around the country and we need leadership that can bring us all together and help us envision how to move forward. And Manny has always done that.”

Adds Mursuli: “Whether you like his vision or not is a whole other issue, I suppose. But he’s a visionary guy who brings all sorts of voices to the table.”

Diaz knows how to wield a position that is only as influentia­l as the person who occupies it.

When he took over as Miami’s mayor — a mostly ceremonial position with little concrete authority — the city was reeling from scandal. Nationally, Miami was known as a city where people threw bananas at City Hall — evoking a “banana republic” — amid political attempts to interfere with a controvers­ial federal raid to seize 6-yearold Cuban national Elián González to return him to Cuba. (Gonzalez’s Miami family was represente­d by Diaz, who is an attorney.)

Miami had its problems under Diaz, including financial shell games that made Miami the only city sanctioned twice by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Called the “phantom mayor” by the press early in his tenure for his preference to work behind the scenes, he left the job with the moniker “Money” Diaz, a knock used by some critics to note his perceived insider status.

But Diaz’s two terms led to a global re-branding of Miami as an internatio­nal city with a burgeoning arts and culture scene. He helped negotiate major deals that led to hundreds of millions of dollars in new public projects, including two new bayside museums, one of which hosted forums last fall featuring President Donald Trump and President-elect Joe Biden.

It was a tumultuous time. But even as scandal engulfed much of City

Hall, he was able to get politician­s on the same page, in part through diplomacy conducted in smokefille­d conversati­ons on patio of the mayor’s second floor suite at the historic Dinner Key government building.

“When he wanted something done, when he wanted to talk to a commission­er, he would say come up after 5 or 6, and they would sit out there — Manny’s a heavy smoker — and he’d have the cigars out for a while,” said Joe Arriola, one of two Miami city managers under Diaz. “People felt comfortabl­e and got a lot of things done that way.”

That skill could prove valuable as the new party chairman, especially after a race in which progressiv­es and some prominent Black activists — including former gubernator­ial candidate Andrew Gillum — aligned against him.

“There are really two key constituen­cies who are really concerned about a potential Manny Diaz chairmansh­ip: the progressiv­e wing of the party and a lot of the leading Black voices within the party,” said Michael Calderin, chairman of the Democratic Progressiv­e Caucus of Florida. “His record on policing and the way the Miami police department has used force in the past is a big concern to both of those groups. There’s not really a significan­t record of Mayor Diaz working with either Black leaders or progressiv­e leaders, and both groups are going to be looking for that to change immediatel­y, should he become chair.”

People who worked with Diaz in Miami say criticisms of his record with police ignore that he introduced reforms. For this new role, Diaz was endorsed by the Democratic Black Caucus of Florida and won endorsemen­ts from across the state, including Black members of Congress and the only Democrat elected statewide, Agricultur­e Commission­er Nikki Fried.

Diaz’s supporters also note that while the former mayor renounced his party affiliatio­n before becoming Miami mayor — he registered again as a Democrat in 2012, after he was out of office — his record as a party activist is strong, dating back to the early 1970s. Mike Abrams, a former Miami-Dade County party chairman and state lawmaker, said Diaz was part of a group that quietly helped consolidat­e Democratic support behind Jimmy Carter and against Alabama Gov. George Wallace ahead of the 1976 Florida presidenti­al primary.

“Manny can be tough and ruthless,” Abrams said. “In 1980, when we were both involved in the [Ted] Kennedy [presidenti­al] campaign and I was running it down here, he felt I was ignoring South Dade and he end-ran me and went to the leadership of the campaign to get resources for an office in South Dade. He did it without telling me. The truth of it is that he was kind of right. If he has to be tough, he knows how to do it.

Even with his friends.”

Mursuli recalled Diaz appearing in a political ad that he says was “critical” to fighting a referendum to repeal a county human rights ordinance banning discrimina­tion on the grounds of sexual orientatio­n. At the time, Mursuli said, many Hispanic politician­s were reluctant to openly embrace gay rights for fear of political fallout.

“It was basically just him talking about the issue and fairness, and he actually mentioned he had gay people in his family,” Mursuli said of the ad. “And between August and Election Day, we picked up about six points with Hispanic males. It was absolutely timed with that ad.” The referendum failed, and the ordinance stood.

Diaz’s relationsh­ip with Bloomberg — who committed $100 million to support Joe Biden’s Florida campaign last year — could also be helpful financiall­y for the party, though it’s unclear if the billionair­e exmayor will remain invested. A Bloomberg spokeswoma­n would not make him available for an interview.

And his allies hope his Cuban heritage and knowledge of Miami will help Democrats stem losses and rebuild trust among South Florida’s Hispanic voters, who went heavily for Trump in November.

“He was successful and can interchang­e with the most powerful of Democrats across the country,” said Mark Richard, a labor attorney who works with a number of Florida’s unions. “But he’s also someone who can go into Versailles and have coffee and talk about why there’s room for your family within the Democratic Party.”

 ??  ??
 ?? ROBERTO VALLADARES Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce ?? Former Miami Mayor Manny Diaz speaks at the South Florida Real Estate Summit.
ROBERTO VALLADARES Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce Former Miami Mayor Manny Diaz speaks at the South Florida Real Estate Summit.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States