Miami Herald (Sunday)

Miami’s ambitious mayor makes a big leap, but is being president really Francis Suarez’s goal?

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Francis Suarez is a man in a hurry.

The two-term mayor and former commission­er of Miami has turned himself into a tech-bro hero, cryptocurr­ency cheerleade­r and conservati­ve cable news staple. He likes the glitz and star power that come with running a city that’s transformi­ng into a technology and financial hub.

That attention seems to have convinced him he should run for president, which he announced Thursday evening in a speech at the Ronald Reagan Presidenti­al Library & Museum, in Simi Valley, California.

“America’s greatest power is Americans,” the mayor told a small audience in a speech refreshing­ly free of anger and vitriol.

Suarez, 45, is now the third Florida Republican seeking the White House, going up against two heavyweigh­ts: Donald Trump and Gov. Ron DeSantis. Suarez filed the paperwork to run in the GOP primary Wednesday.

Suarez is young, telegenic and a good fundraiser. But his candidacy is a head-scratcher: Is he really running for president — or something else?

Suarez’s name isn’t even mentioned in many presidenti­al polls. It seems far beyond his political reach to compete for the nomination with Trump, DeSantis and the handful of other candidates, such as Mike Pence, who are running as anti-Trump Republican­s.

Mayors have a bad track record running for president. Think of “America’s Mayor” himself, Rudy Giuliani, of New York City, or Pete Buttigieg, of South Bend, Indiana.

THINNER RESUME

As a mayor with mostly ceremonial duties, Suarez does not have the gravitas or experience of his counterpar­ts in the 2024 primary, which includes governors, a senator, a vice president and, of course, a former president. But Suarez has built a brand that has gotten him this far. His name made it onto billboards across San Francisco and the Bay Area, telling tech companies in a mock tweet: “Thinking about moving to

Miami? DM [direct message] me.”

That brand has been tarnished recently, though. Sources told the Herald he faces scrutiny by the

FBI and local authoritie­s for $10,000 monthly payments he received from a developer for consulting work — while serving as mayor.

That’s small potatoes compared to Trump’s legal problems, but those fees look like a conflict of interest.

Much as mounting a long-shot, yet buzz-filled, run for president in 2020 landed Democrat Buttigieg a job as U.S. secretary of transporta­tion, Suarez, too, might wind up with a plum political appointmen­t out of this contest. In other words, he could win without actually winning.

If he raises enough money and gets a couple of viral soundbites at a presidenti­al debate, Suarez might line up his next job. Perhaps as someone’s VP pick or as a paid political commentato­r or top political consultant. Suarez is energetic, Hispanic, fluent in Spanish — appealing to the type of voters the GOP has invested significan­t resources to attract. As mayor, he’s been criticized for focusing too much on shiny baubles and less on the unglamorou­s job of leading Miami-Dade County’s largest city. But those qualities might play well in some other role.

There’s a caveat: Suarez’s candidacy cannot fade immediatel­y out of the gate and risk ending his political career, said Dario Moreno, professor of politics and internatio­nal relations at Florida Internatio­nal University. That means Suarez must fight for media coverage in a crowded primary.

WHO IS HE REALLY?

Being the cool mayor of a midsized city isn’t enough to figure prominentl­y on the hyper-polarized national stage. And Suarez, who has taken some moderate stances in Miami, already has shown he’s willing to push harder to the right to get the conservati­ve media hype he needs.

Suarez once talked about his goal of reducing Miami’s greenhouse gas emissions to a net zero by 2050. He was open about not voting for Trump. He even told the Herald he voted for progressiv­e Democrat Andrew Gillum for governor in 2018, though, in 2022, he said he supported DeSantis.

A HARSHER TONE

Contrast that with the social media ads a group affiliated with him ran in key primary states last year. They railed about “the radical left” and accused President Joe Biden of a “rabid desire to control our classrooms.” On Fox News, Suarez bashed the “liberal” Miami Herald, which broke the story about his $10,000-a-month work for that developer and how Suarez’s office helped the developer resolve permitting issues with the city.

With his presidenti­al announceme­nt at the Reagan library, is Suarez hoping to convey that he would be a Reagan-style Republican? Or that he would attract what they used to call “Reagan Democrats?” “The Gipper” attracted followers from both parties. Suarez might be trying to create a new lane by making Reagan Republican­s a thing again — in the party of Trump, no less. The mayor did evoke Miami as a “city on the hill,” one of Ronald Reagan’s signature lines.

If a tie to Reagan is what Suarez seeks, we can’t help but note what a lost opportunit­y it was for Suarez not to declare his candidacy in Miami, the city of which he is mayor.

LOYAL TO GOP

Exactly 40 years ago, Reagan came to our city and created a stir among Cuban exiles, who warmly welcomed him at a then-popular restaurant called La Esquina de Tejas in the heart of Little Havana, a visit he referenced in his speech delivered almost 3,000 miles away. It was the first time Cuban exiles felt heard and, at that moment, they recognized their voting power and cemented their loyalty to the GOP.

That bit of history might be irrelevant now for Suarez, who’s made it clear he’s got his sights set on something bigger than Miami.

For this man in a hurry and with lots of ambition, there will be no time for baby steps. Suarez will have to define himself on the national stage and show Republican voters — many already smitten with Trump or, to a lesser degree, DeSantis — who he really is. Is he the hip moderate, Reagan 2.0 or a right-wing Biden baiter? If the latter, he’ll be fighting for ground to which Trump and DeSantis already have staked a huge claim.

If Suarez truly is seeking the biggest political prize in the free world, he’ll first have to make a powerful case that he’s the better choice for the nomination.

That said, he might end up with a really neat consolatio­n prize.

 ?? PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com ?? City of Miami Mayor Francis Suarez speaks at Miami City Hall, as he delivers his State of the City address in January.
PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com City of Miami Mayor Francis Suarez speaks at Miami City Hall, as he delivers his State of the City address in January.

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