Miami Herald

Steve Bovo rides endorsemen­t from Trump to become mayor of Hialeah

- BY AARON LEIBOWITZ aleibowitz@miamiheral­d.com Aaron Leibowitz: 305-376-2235, @aaron_leib

Esteban “Steve” Bovo will become Hialeah’s first new mayor in over a decade.

With the vast majority of votes counted in Tuesday’s primary, the longtime politician looked set to comfortabl­y avoid a runoff and defeat four other candidates to win the mayor’s seat outright.

He will be sworn in Friday.

Bovo, who was a county commission­er and state representa­tive with Hialeah residents among his constituen­ts, received endorsemen­ts from the top tier of the Republican Party — including from Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and former President Donald Trump.

At his victory party Tuesday at Hialeah Park Casino, Bovo was flanked by local Republican leaders, including Lt. Gov. Jeanette Nuñez, state Sen. Rene Garcia and Miami-Dade County Commission­er Jose “Pepe” Diaz.

“As mayor, I’m going to work as much as I can to make sure that the American dream that many have sought to find in the city of

Hialeah is a reality,” Bovo told his cheering supporters.

Bovo avoided a Nov. 16 runoff by winning a majority of votes in the primary. He handily defeated his toughest challenger, former Hialeah City Council President Isis Garcia-Martinez. With all but a few precincts reporting results Tuesday night, Bovo had close to 60% of the vote while

Garcia-Martinez had just over 20%.

Activist Fernando Godo finished in third place, while ex-Mayor Julio Martinez and multi-time candidate Juan Santana were far behind.

Bovo and Garcia-Martinez are both Republican­s and Cuban Americans, reflecting the majority of Hialeah’s more than 230,000 residents.

Garcia-Martinez, who runs a daycare, blasted Bovo on the campaign trail as a career politician who saw the Hialeah mayor’s seat as a backup after he lost the race for county mayor last year.

But Bovo’s high-profile campaign proved successful. He will replace Carlos Hernández as the top administra­tor in Miami-Dade County’s second-mostpopulo­us city, running its day-to-day operations and making around $190,000 a year.

Bovo’s stepson, Oscar de la Rosa, is a Hialeah councilman and confirmed Tuesday night — as he first said this year — that he plans to resign to avoid the appearance of a conflict.

TWO COUNCIL RACES HEAD TO RUNOFFS

In one of three Hialeah City Council races, incumbent Carl Zogby won handily against two challenger­s, Salvador Blanco and Mayra Jimenez, to avoid a runoff.

Two other races for empty council seats will head to runoffs on Nov. 16. In Group Six, law student Bryan Calvo and registered nurse Angelica Pacheco will square off. The candidate whom Bovo supported, Eddie Santiesteb­an, came in third, just shy of the runoff.

Bovo’s chosen candidate (Luis Rodriguez) fared better in Group Seven, which will also be decided in two weeks. Rodriguez was in first place ahead of second-place finisher Maylin Villalonga, who ran on a pro-Trump platform.

 ?? JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com ?? Steve Bovo and his wife, Viviana, celebrate at Hialeah Park Casino on Tuesday.
JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com Steve Bovo and his wife, Viviana, celebrate at Hialeah Park Casino on Tuesday.

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