Joe Sanchez ‘seriously considering’ run for Miami-Dade Commission in D5

Joe Sanchez ‘seriously considering’ run for Miami-Dade Commission in D5
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Former Miami Commissioner Joe Sanchez, who lost a tough Republican primary for Miami-Dade Sheriff last August, is “seriously considering” the commission race in District 5, now that Commissioner Eileen Higgins has announced her Miami mayoral run. It would pit him against former State Rep. and Miami Beach Commissioner David Richardson.

He is absolutely not running for Miami mayor, as was rumored during the campaign for sheriff. “I was never interested in the Miami mayor position. I always said that,” Sanchez told Political Cortadito Tuesday.

Sanchez has been strongly encouraged, practically pressured, to run by several friends and supporters, several homeowner associations, and his American Legion buddies who want to see a veteran on the commission dais.

Read related: Miami-Dade Commissioner Eileen Higgins could join Miami Mayor’s race

“None of our commissioners are veterans,” said Hector Schwerert, a vet who is 70% disabled and having a harder time every day surviving on his social security and retirement benefits.

“We want someone who really knows us and feels our pain. We need someone who understands our issues and knows our problems,” Schwerert said, citing the rising number of veterans who are finding themselves homeless.

A number of other sources told Ladra that Sanchez has been seeking financial support commitments before he announces. He could also be hesitant after the bruising he took last year in the Republican primary for the first elected Miami-Dade sheriff in six decades. It was a bitterly fought campaign and Sanchez took a lot of hits before eventually losing to Rosie Cordero-Stutz, in a crowded field of 11 candidates with 22% of the vote. Cordero-Stutz, who ended up winning the general and is now our sheriff, got 24%.

Is Sanchez — who took a leave of absence from his job at the Florida Highway Patrol to campaign but is now nearing retirement — ready to put himself out there again?

“That’s something me and my wife will decide when the time comes,” he said. But he is not jumping the gun. He said he wants to see what Higgins will do first.

Higgins filed her candidate’s oath and campaign account information on April 2 with the intent to run for Miami mayor, but not everyone believes it. La Gringa would have to resign to run and give up two more years of county government, where she is the senior lawmaker, for a very risky race against, we think, Miami Commissioner Joe Carollo, former Miami Commissioner Alex Diaz de la Portilla — who Higgins already beat once, but not citywide — and former City Manager Emilio Gonzalez, as well as a few other candidates. She has until September to qualify.

Read related: David Richardson seeks to replace Eileen Higgins on county commission

“If it does open up, I would be interested in running,” Sanchez said. “If that were to happen, yes, I’d probably run in District 5, a district I’ve lived in my whole life, a district I represented as a city commissioner.”

Joe Sanchez posted on social media last year that he was happy to be back at work after the sheriff’s campaign.

But would September be too late?

Richardson, who lost a constitutional race of his own in November — for tax collector to Dariel Fernandez — has already filed paperwork intending to run for the commission seat should Higgins bail. There’s no special election set yet — and there will have to be one if it’s not in November because there are three years left in Higgins’ term. So he’s filed for the 2028 race, but that can easily be changed if Higgins jumps.

That means Richardson could have a significant advantage in fundraising and connecting with voters if Sanchez waits until September.

There may also be other candidates that decide to jump in, say, another Hispanic candidate to force a runoff. Knowing Miami and its penchant for politicos reciclados, we may still get a Renier Diaz de la Portilla, who lost a the 2020 race against Higgins but came too close for comfort with 48% of the vote. Or, say, former county commissioner Bruno Barreiro — who used to sit in that seat but resigned to run for Congress (he lost) — or his wife, Zoraida, who ran against Higgins in the 2018 special election to replace Mr. Barreiro and lost with 47% of the vote.

We still have 144 days til the qualifying deadline at 6 p.m. on Sept. 20.