Miami Herald

Uber driver who hears ‘everything’ wants to be Miami-Dade’s mayor

- BY DOUGLAS HANKS dhanks@miamiheral­d.com

Miami-Dade mayoral hopeful Carlos Antonio de Armas never ran for office before, has $5 in his campaign account and his name isn’t even printed on the ballot because he opted to save $2,500 on his qualifying fee by paying $300 to file as a write-in candidate.

Still, the 52-year-old can point to one advantage over his rivals: He has driven more voters than any of them have.

“More than a year ago I started to do Uber, just to talk to people and find out what’s going on,” the Fontainebl­eau resident said. “When they sit in the back seat, they tell you everyearne­d thing. What their fears are. What they’re suffering from. What their dreams are.”

Campaign records show de Armas hasn’t raised any money, the only candidate with no recorded donations. The $305 listed in contributi­ons came from him, and $300 of that went to the write-in fee. A filing fee for a ballot slot cost $2,800.

Born in Colombia and raised in the Baranquill­a area, de Armas lived in New York before coming to Miami in 2005. His ex-wife was a U.S. citizen, and they have three children, ages 10, 12 and 14. De Armas said they share custody. “I cannot survive without my children,” he said.

Florida Internatio­nal University said de Armas a master’s of Internatio­nal Business there in 2015. While he has owned a trucking company and worked in banking, he’s now living off savings while relying on Uber for new income.

His campaign disclosure form lists a negative net worth due to a lack of assets beyond a new Toyota Camry and more than $100,000 in student debt, credit-card bills and an auto note. “We’re surviving,” he said.

Like Monique Barley and Ludmilla Domond, the other two rookie candidates in the race, de Armas uses his lack of political experience as a selling point.

“I am the voice of those without voices,” he said during a recent interview. Pointing to the millions raised in the race by county Commission­ers Esteban “Steve” Bovo Jr., Daniella Levine Cava and Xavier Suarez and former Mayor Alex Penelas, de Armas said his lack of money leaves him independen­t. “They all have owners,” he said.

De Armas said he started driving for Uber about a year ago and, according to his Uber app, completed 4,456 trips since then. He hands out De Armas for Mayor cards to passengers with his cellphone number, write-in instructio­ns and “Be The Change!” slogan. He said the cards tend to spark conversati­on on county government.

He recalled a discussion on the value of voting when driving two men to recent racial-justice protests in Miami, and being surprised to learn from a constructi­on worker who got charged for meals during a stint behind bars. MiamiDade jails charge $2 a day.

“This is something I didn’t know,” he said.

De Armas is still driving during early voting in advance of the Aug. 18 primary, and he related a recent sign of momentum.

“Yesterday, I gave my card to someone,” he recalled in a recent interview. “She said: ‘I already voted for you.’ ”

 ?? MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com ?? Carlos de Armas is a write-in candidate for Miami-Dade County mayor.
MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com Carlos de Armas is a write-in candidate for Miami-Dade County mayor.

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