Miami Herald

Miami Herald editorial writer Isadora Rangel is named finalist for the Pulitzer Prize

- BY JOEY FLECHAS jflechas@miamiheral­d.com

A series of incisive Miami Herald editorials highlighti­ng the depth of dysfunctio­n in the city of Miami’s government while calling for sweeping reforms was named a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize on Monday, the latest recognitio­n for the Herald’s decorated editorial board.

Isadora Rangel, a member of the Miami Herald’s editorial board since 2021, was honored as a finalist for “Miami Dysfunctio­n,” a collection of five editorials that were published in 2023 and examined the scandals and political turmoil that defined Miami City Hall during a tumultuous year. The editorials also offered ideas for how the troubled city can rebuild public trust, increase voter turnout and improve the governance of Florida’s second most populous city.

“I’d like to think that we put the weight of the editorial board behind these ideas, and I hope that that matters,” Rangel said on Tuesday.

Rangel pointed to the work of the Herald newsroom, which operates separately from the editorial board, as a catalyst for the board’s analysis and commentary on City Hall’s shortcomin­gs.

She said the editorials drew from the Herald’s coverage of Mayor Francis Suarez’s quiet side gig as a consultant for a Coconut Grove developer, leading to state and federal investigat­ions; reporting on the arrest of then-Miami Commission­er Alex Díaz de la Portilla on corruption charges; and a $63.5 million civil judgment against Commission­er Joe Carollo after a federal jury found he pushed city employees to harass Little Havana businessme­n as retaliatio­n for supporting a political opponent.

“The genesis of ‘Miami Dysfunctio­n’ was the feeling on the editorial board that the city was not being run on behalf of its constituen­ts, but on behalf of those in power, and we felt that was counterpro­ductive,” Rangel said.

Miami Herald Executive Editor Alex Mena said the recognitio­n “underscore­s the vital role of journalism in fostering transparen­cy and driving positive change in our community.”

“I am immensely proud of Isadora Rangel for being named a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize,” Mena said. “Her insightful editorials, rooted in rigorous journalism, shed light on political scandals and advocated for meaningful reforms in Miami.”

The announceme­nt marks the second year in a row the Pulitzer Board has honored the Herald’s opinion team. Amy Driscoll, then the deputy editorial page editor, won the Herald its 24th Pulitzer in May 2023 for her series “Broken Promises” — another body of work focused on holding local government­s accountabl­e in Miami-Dade County.

“We’re so proud of the recognitio­n for Isadora Rangel’s editorial series ‘Miami Dysfunctio­n’ as a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize,” said Driscoll, now the Herald’s opinion editor overseeing the board’s work. “That series spotlights the vital work needed in this community, and it helped spark a muchneeded conversati­on. It’s gratifying that the Pulitzer board acknowledg­ed the work of the Miami Herald opinion team for the second year in a row.”

The distinctio­n also marks a posthumous laurel for Nancy Ancrum, who capped a 40-year career at the Herald by serving as the Herald’s editorial-page editor for a decade before retiring at the end of 2023. Weeks after her retirement, Ancrum died, leaving a legacy that included two Pulitzer Prizes for the Herald’s opinion team. In 2017, Jim Morin won the Pulitzer for his editorial cartoons.

Rangel, in her own words, is a “proud immigrant,” born and raised in São Paulo, Brazil, and a graduate of Florida Internatio­nal University. She returned to Miami in 2021 after a stint as the opinion and engagement editor for Florida Today in Brevard County, the Space Coast’s major daily newspaper.

From late June through November, Rangel wrote five editorials sharply focused on the city of Miami’s problems and how to fix them. The Pulitzer jury described the work as “a scathing series that roots the city’s multiple political scandals in a troubled local democracy and champions electoral reforms.”

The winner of the Pulitzer Prize for editorial writing was David E. Hoffman, of The Washington Post, for “a compelling and well-researched series on new technologi­es and the tactics authoritar­ian regimes use to repress dissent in the digital age, and how they can be fought.”

Since the Herald series was published, Miami voters elected two commission­ers who ran on reform platforms, and even the embattled mayor floated major changes to the municipal government during a speech in January, repeating some of the reforms suggested in the Herald editorials.

The commission has yet to assemble a charterrev­iew commission, which could recommend changes to the city charter.

Rangel said she hopes the conversati­on about how to improve the city government continues, and she emphasized that the debate should include those who don’t want to see change.

“I welcome the people who oppose these ideas, too,” she said. “Honestly, we would like to see those discussion­s happen in public, even if some of these players think that these reforms are not valid.”

Joey Flechas: 305-376-3602, @joeflech

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Isadora Rangel

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