Miami Herald

Amid allegation­s of spoiler candidate scheme, Democrats call for S. Fla. state senator to resign

- BY SAMANTHA J. GROSS AND ANA CEBALLOS sgross@miamiheral­d.com aceballos@miamiheral­d.com

Florida Democrats on Friday called for Republican Sen. Ileana Garcia’s resignatio­n and for a special election to be held in Miami-Dade Senate District 37. The demands came a day after state prosecutor­s accused a Miami GOP operative of planting a no-party candidate to sway the outcome of the race in November 2020.

Garcia’s victory strengthen­ed Senate Republican­s’ decades-long control of the Florida Senate. But Democrats are calling into question the integrity of the election after a 25-page arrest affidavit laid bare an alleged scheme that saw former Republican state Sen. Frank Artiles pay an autoparts dealer more than $40,000 to run and influence the race.

The sham candidate, Alexis “Alex” Rodriguez, shared the same surname as the incumbent, Democrat José Javier Rodríguez. The goal of Alex Rodriguez’s candidacy, investigat­ors said, was to “confuse voters and siphon votes from the incumbent.” Garcia won by 32 votes out of 215,000 ballots cast. Alex Rodriguez received more than 6,000 votes.

“In the interest of fairness and the sanctity of our democratic electoral process, we call upon Sen. Garcia to resign immediatel­y,” Florida Democratic Party Chairman Manny Diaz said during a news conference Friday morning. “My late father would have never allowed me to accept any benefit that was clearly obtained through fraudulent means. He also taught me that where there is smoke, there is usually fire.”

But it is unlikely Senate Republican­s and Gov. Ron DeSantis will go along with the requests.

“This is a matter for local law enforcemen­t and the courts,” said Meredith Beatrice, a spokeswoma­n for the governor, who has the power under the state Constituti­on to suspend Garcia.

THERE ARE OPTIONS

The Senate can remove a suspended official by holding a special session convened by the Senate president or by a majority of its membership. If she were to be removed, the governor could then call for a special election. Since taking office, DeSantis has suspended several elected officials, including Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel and former Palm Beach County Supervisor of Elections Susan Bucher.

Senate President Wilton Simpson on Thursday said he wanted to see “all the facts” before he comments on the case, details of which were made public by the Miami Herald last

December.

Artiles surrendere­d to police Thursday on felony charges on suspicion of offering his acquaintan­ce, Alex Rodriguez, $50,000 to run as an independen­t in Miami-Dade’s Senate District 37 race. Rodriguez gave himself up to police Thursday as well.

The district includes downtown Miami, Coral Gables and Pinecrest.

When asked if the Democratic Party would be pursuing legal action to contest the results of the election, Diaz said “we are exploring every option.”

“We are also looking at potential referrals to the Department of Justice,” he added. “We are exploring every avenue that we have. This election can’t stand, because this election is tainted.”

Investigat­ors have not found evidence that Garcia knew of Artiles’ alleged scheme. Garcia told the Herald she has never met Artiles.

“I can’t attest, I can’t say and I can’t answer for someone I don’t know and for something that I haven’t done. I am not the focal point of this,” she said on Wednesday, when authoritie­s raided Artiles’ house.

On Thursday, when Artiles surrendere­d and state prosecutor­s laid out the alleged scheme, Garcia said in a text message that she was not going to “hit back because I’m working across the isle [sic] trying to to do what is best.”

But, she asked, “Don’t I get merit or is it just partisan driven?”

“Why is everyone so sure that they just didn’t want to vote for the incumbent, José Javier Rodríguez?” Garcia said. “What about when the incumbent had an NPA in 2016, she was a 91-yearold NPA that got 9,979 [votes]. I’m trying to do the best I can for the community.”

Senate Democratic Leader Gary Farmer, however, views it differentl­y.

“Whenever the integrity of the [elections] process is challenged it is a serious thing,” Farmer said.

SENATE’S OUTLOOK

On Thursday, Simpson sidesteppe­d questions on whether the Legislatur­e, which is in the midst of the 2021 legislativ­e session, should address election issues with ghost candidates as seen in Senate District 37.

“This happens to be the topic of the day, so it will get accelerate­d based on the will of the Senate,” Simpson said.

Farmer said the situation

“certainly has the attention” of the 16 Senate Democrats.

“The question is are our Republican colleagues going to join us, to prove to Florida they take election integrity seriously,” the Lighthouse Point Democrat said. “It’s that old saying, put your money where your mouth is.”

Florida Republican­s so far have proposed election bills that would add hurdles to vote-by-mail, like requiring everyone who signed up for mail ballots in 2020 to reapply to get them in 2022, eliminatin­g drop boxes and moving up the starting time for counting vote-bymail ballots.

Democrats have called the bills a voter-suppressio­n tactic, intended to tamp down the record vote-by-mail support of Democrats in 2020, especially in the state’s largest metro areas. In 2020, there were 2.1 million Democrats who voted by mail, compared to 1.5 million Republican­s and 1 million voters who were not affiliated with any party.

Meanwhile, Democrats

are pushing one bill that would require no-party candidates to be registered as independen­ts for a year before running. If such a requiremen­t had been in state law, it could have prevented Alex Rodriguez from running as an independen­t in the Senate District 37 race.

According to prosecutor­s, Artiles instructed Rodriguez to change his party affiliatio­n from Republican to independen­t at the Department of Elections in Doral days before filing his paperwork to run for office.

Sen. Perry Thurston, D-Lauderhill, however, said that like many other Democrat-led bills filed in the GOP-majority Legislatur­e, “I don’t think any of them are getting any traction right now.”

Senate Ethics and Elections Committee Chairman Dennis Baxley on Friday was non-committal about addressing the spoiler-candidate issue.

“I don’t really know much about the back story,” Baxley, R-Ocala, said. “We need to learn a little more. I would not want to rush to judgment.”

 ?? MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com ?? Frank Artiles leaves the Turner Guilford Knight Correction­al Center in Miami on Thursday. The former state senator is accused of planting a sham candidate in a state Senate race.
MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com Frank Artiles leaves the Turner Guilford Knight Correction­al Center in Miami on Thursday. The former state senator is accused of planting a sham candidate in a state Senate race.

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