Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Groups backing presidenti­al bid raise more than $13M

- McClatchyD­C data fellow Amelia Winger contribute­d to this report. ©2023 Miami Herald. Visit at miamiheral­d.com. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

MIAMI — Miami Mayor Francis Suarez announced that his presidenti­al campaign and political committees supporting him have raised $13.6 million, though his campaign did not offer a specific breakdown, and a newly released finance report show he raised almost $1 million in direct contributi­ons.

Suarez, an attorney and private-equity executive who is running for the Republican nomination halfway through his second mayoral term, tweeted about fundraisin­g totals Friday afternoon.

A finance report posted by his principal campaign committee shortly after his tweet showed he raised $945,450 through June 30.

Suarez filed to run June 14. In his tweet, Suarez combined this number with fundraisin­g from unspecifie­d political action committees supporting him.

“I am extremely pleased to announce that my campaign, which only began a few days before the end of the reporting period, along with the reports made public today by PACs supporting our effort, have raised a total of over 13.6 million dollars,” reads the tweet.

It is unclear which PACs Suarez is referring to in his tweet.

One super PAC known to be supporting Suarez, SOS America, reported about $5.8 million in the bank to

begin the year, according to available finance reports.

The PAC’s next report is scheduled for July 31. Suarez needs a minimum of 40,000 unique donors to qualify for the first GOP debate in August, according to the Republican National Committee, along with other fundraisin­g and polling criteria.

The mayor’s tweet suggests he will qualify for the debate, even though it is unclear from publicly available data exactly how many unique donors he has.

“Having just got started, we will meet the RNC limits for the first debate,” reads the tweet. “I am humbled and blessed. Thanks to all who have given.”

The campaign did not immediatel­y answer The Miami Herald’s questions about his campaign’s finances and the PACs referenced in his tweet.

Federal campaigns are required to itemize contributi­ons of $200 or more. The Suarez campaign’s report showed about 350 individual donors each

contribute­d over $200, totaling $916,663, but $10,400 of that was refunded.

Another unknown number of contributo­rs gave a total of $28,787 in small-dollar donations that are not required to be itemized in the report.

The report shows that 12 people who identified as lawyers at Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, the internatio­nal litigation firm that hired Suarez in 2021, contribute­d to the campaign.

The firm recently told the

Herald that Suarez has been on unpaid leave since July 1.

Five people who listed their employer as real estate developmen­t company Gencom, including four executives, each donated $3,300, the maximum contributi­on for individual donors.

Gencom is part of a team that plans to redevelop the Hyatt Regency and James L. Knight Center in downtown Miami.

Some of Suarez’s other donors who gave maximum contributi­ons include:

Nitin Motwani, developer of Miami WorldCente­r

Jonathan Oringer, founder of Shuttersto­ck

Russell Galbut, developer of Nema Miami in Edgewater

Craig Robins, developer of the Design District

David Grutman, club and restaurant owner

Suarez’s fundraisin­g efforts made headlines Thursday when he tweeted that his campaign would hold a drawing to win tickets to see legendary footballer Lionel Messi’s upcoming debut for MLS franchise Inter Miami.

The campaign advertised the raffle to attract donors, though a contributi­on is not required to enter the drawing. The effort could raise questions about how the raffle is permitted under Florida’s gaming laws. It could also indicate Suarez needs a bump in small-dollar donors to qualify for the first GOP debate on Aug. 23.

The mayor is facing scrutiny for his work outside City Hall, including a side job working for a real estate developer who sought help from the mayor’s office with a permitting problem. The matter is under state and federal investigat­ion.

 ?? FILE ?? Miami Mayor Francis Suarez speaks to the media during the annual hurricane preparatio­n exercise at the City of Miami’s Emergency Operations Center on May 29, 2019, in Miami.
FILE Miami Mayor Francis Suarez speaks to the media during the annual hurricane preparatio­n exercise at the City of Miami’s Emergency Operations Center on May 29, 2019, in Miami.

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