Miami Herald

Coral Gables mayor says recall effort is funded by ‘dark money.’ Where did it come from?

- BY TESS RISKI triski@miamiheral­d.com Tess Riski: @tessriski

A campaign-finance report shows the political committee petitionin­g to recall the mayor of Coral Gables raised $50,000 in the first quarter of 2024 but does little to answer questions about the recall effort’s financial backers, with the mayor accusing the group of raising “dark money.”

End the Corruption, the political committee that was launched on March 13 to recall Coral Gables Mayor Vince Lago, disclosed just three sources of funding in a report that the campaign filed Wednesday evening: $17,500 from a political committee controlled by a Tallahasse­e attorney, $17,500 from a Tallahasse­e-based group called Florida Consumer Alliance and $15,000 from a Tallahasse­e-based political committee with the same address called Florida Workers’ Alliance.

Attorney David Winker, who is the registered agent for End the Corruption, said the committee has intentiona­lly obscured the identity of individual donors.

“People are so scared to do anything other than sign a petition,” said Winker, who noted that individual residents have donated to the recall effort but that several worry they could face retributio­n for openly contributi­ng.

“We do want to protect the residents,” Winker said.

The committee reported spending about $25,000 on canvassing, paid to the consulting group Ven-Vamos Strategies, and about $1,300 on shirts.

While details remain scarce, the campaignhe finance report provides the most insight to date into the funding behind the recall campaign, which has until Friday to gather signatures from 5% of the approximat­ely 32,000 registered voters in Coral Gables before advancing to the next phase.

The recall petition accuses Lago of “misfeasanc­e and malfeasanc­e” related to the mayor’s business dealings, based partly on his ties to embattled developer Rishi Kapoor.

Lago said in a written statement Wednesday night to the Miami Herald that “the people funding this illegal and undemocrat­ic petition are hiding their dark money donors behind committees in Tallahasse­e.”

“What are they afraid of?” Lago continued.

“Why won’t they show who they are? The [residents] of Coral Gables will not stand for this and will not support this attempt at subverting democracy to benefit out of town developers.”

The mayor’s political committee, Coral Gables First, raised $0 during the first quarter of the year and spent almost $125,000, according to a campaign-finance report filed Wednesday. The spending included $50,000 to Berthier Group, a political consulting firm run by Jesse Manzano-Plaza, and more than $9,000 in legal fees.

‘NEVER HEARD OF THEM’

Reached by phone Wednesday, Tallahasse­e lawyer Mark Herron, whose political committee Mark PC contribute­d $17,500 to the recall effort on March 28, initially said had “never heard of them” when asked about the End the Corruption group. He later said he administer­s the political committee for several of his clients but did not directly answer a question asking if the $17,500 contributi­on is composed of multiple individual donations.

“All contributi­ons and expenditur­es are reported in the committee’s campaign treasurer’s reports,” Herron said in a text message.

Mark PC reported just two contributi­ons in the first quarter of the year: $10,000 from the Latino Alliance political committee and $25,000 from a group called People Over Profits.

During that same time period, the political committee made three expenditur­es in addition to the $17,500 that it gave to End the Corruption.

On March 28, Mark PC gave $15,000 to the Florida Workers’ Alliance political committee. That same day, Florida Workers’ Alliance made a $15,000 contributi­on to End the Corruption, according to Florida Division of Elections records. Herron said he has no connection to Florida Workers’ Alliance, which has received more than $150,000 from Mark PC since 2021, according to the state’s campaign-finance database.

Attorney Stephen Thomas— who is chairperso­n for the Florida Workers’ Alliance political committee, and, according to

2022 tax filings, the director of the Florida Consumer Alliance, a 501(c)(4) that gave $17,500 to End the Corruption — did not immediatel­y respond to the Miami Herald’s request for comments.

WHAT HAPPENS NEXT IN THE RECALL PROCESS

There are several key next steps in the recall process.

Under Florida law, the recall committee has 30 days to gather signatures from 5% of the approximat­ely 32,000 registered voters in Coral Gables, which is about 1,600 signatures.

The clerk will then submit those signatures to the supervisor of elections for verificati­on. If the elections supervisor can verify the requisite number of signatures, Lago will have a chance to submit a “defensive statement” against the recall. The clerk would then prepare a document called the “recall petition and defense.”

From there, according to state law, the committee would have another 60 days to gather signatures from at least 15% of the city’s electors — or approximat­ely 4,800 voters in Coral Gables. The supervisor of elections would then verify the signatures to “certify whether 15 percent of the qualified electors of the municipali­ty have signed the petitions.”

If enough signatures are certified, the city would have a recall election within approximat­ely 30 to 60 days, according to state law. Coral Gables voters would decide whether to recall Lago, who is up for reelection next April.

 ?? PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com | March 12, 2024 ?? Coral Gables Mayor Vince Lago says: ‘The people funding this illegal and undemocrat­ic petition are hiding their dark money donors behind committees in Tallahasse­e.’
PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com | March 12, 2024 Coral Gables Mayor Vince Lago says: ‘The people funding this illegal and undemocrat­ic petition are hiding their dark money donors behind committees in Tallahasse­e.’
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