Omar Blanco, Rudy Giuliani mark ‘end’ of ‘coup’ at Miami cigar shop

Omar Blanco, Rudy Giuliani mark ‘end’ of ‘coup’ at Miami cigar shop
  • Sumo

While Miami Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez was busy scoring free tickets to Super Bowl LIV from a billionaire that gets millions in county subsidies, one of his opponents in the Republican congressional primary celebrated the beginning of the end of impeachment with a close, personal friend of the POTUS.

“It was great talking to President Donald J. Trump‘s personal attorney and New York City’s greatest mayor, Rudy W. Giuliani, tonight in Miami,” firefighter/paramedic and labor union leader Omar Blanco posted on his Facebook about 9 p.m. Friday, with a photo of himself standing with America’s Mayor.

Giuliani himself posted pictures Saturday of him and Blanco and some friends at Prime Cigar the day before: “Folks celebrating the end of this attempted coup. All asking me are Biden, Schiff, Comey, Hillary, etc going to get away with this. I told them keep watching,” Giuliani posted about 6 p.m., plugging his podcast at rudygiulianiCS.com.

“We were at Prime Cigar lounge in downtown Miami and he wanted to come hang out with regular folk for about an hour,” Blanco said, adding that Giuliani was in Miami briefly and was between meetings.

The two had met a few months ago in Palm Beach at an event for Turning Point USA, a conservative non-profit affiliated with Students For Trump, where Blanco also met Sarah Huckabee Sanders and Donald Trump, Jr., (no one can question his GOP creds now). “And he knew that I am running for Congress against Debbie Mucarsel-Powell,” Blanco said.

But he doesn’t want anyone to think it was an endorsement. Blanco was just kicking back with America’s Mayor and Trump’s attorney.

“It was just like sitting around a campfire talking about our country and how to move forward to get some work done without this impeachment nonsense,” Blanco said, adding that Giuliani grabbed a “bunch of Padrons” to take home with him.

Others in the impromptu, intimate gathering included Ivette Pinto, Blanco’s fundraiser, and Evelio Medina, president of the Miami Brickell Chamber of Commerce and creator of myriad local magazines and websites, as well as the founder of the Deplorables Nation. There are also people from New York and Chicago Ladra doesn’t know.

Read related: Miami man founds ‘Deplorables Nation,’ plans inaugural ball

“It was very nice,” Blanco said. “We were just talking about issues in general with the impeachment. He felt like the worst is over. He was just trying to enjoy some time with people who enjoy his company.”

Maybe those moments are getting fewer and further between.

Just last week, Giuliani blasted former National Security Advisor-turned-tell-all-author John Bolton, calling him a “backstabber” for saying that he was so concerned about the shadow foreign policy dealing, he had someone keep tabs on Rudy. In an interview with CBS News, Giuliani said that Bolton “never said to me, ‘I’ve got a problem with what you are doing in Ukraine.'”

But guess what? Now that “the worst is over” and we are at the beginning of the end, how much you want to bet that Giuliani ends up writing a tell-all book of his own?

Said Blanco: “He said that there is so much more.”

Giuliani, who has always been popular with first responders, posed for another photo on his way into town at Miami International Airport, it looks like, with some of our best in beige. “These are the real heroes! Members of the Miami Dade Police Department,” he posted.