Post-election Vince Lago revenge tour in Coral Gables = political retaliation

Post-election Vince Lago revenge tour in Coral Gables = political retaliation
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Mayor proposes paying commissioners $1 a year

If the voters in Coral Gables thought that the animosity on the commission and the toxic rhetoric from the mayor was going to end with last month’s election, they have another thing coming. Freshly re-elected with a solid 55% of the vote, Mayor Vince Lago, emboldened by his and his slate’s victories, is doubling down on the hate and disrespect, seemingly hellbent on revenge.

Such a sore winner.

It’s not just because he’s going to roll back the raises and car allowances that commissioners gave themselves in 2023. That was a campaign promise. If that’s what the voters want, and he’s following through.

But Lago wants to go further.

There are two items on the commission salary in Tuesday’s agenda. One of them will roll the salaries back to what it was  before the trio of Commissioners Melissa Castro, Ariel Fernandez and former Commissioner Kirk Menendez, approved the raises in the 2023 budget. But just so that readers know what this means financially: The mayor’s salary will go from $69,000 a year back to $47,400. The vice mayor’s will go from $67,000 back to $41,475 and the commissioners’ pay will go from getting $65,000 annually to $38,500. That’s a total savings of $75,625 a year,

And you get what you pay for.

Read related: Vince Lago, Rhonda Anderson handily coast to re-election in Coral Gables

But the other “proposed ordinance” would cut their salaries to $1 a year — starting with the very next paycheck.

That’s not political retaliation? Is that what voters want, too? This is more than just “elections have consequences.” It is why Lago doesn’t mention the $1 option in a self-aggrandizing piece he wrote for Community Newspapers.

And for whoever thinks that is not targeting Fernandez and Castro, a single mother that Lago has repeatedly disrespected in public, take a look at the second part of the ordinance: “Beginning October 1, 2026 the compensation would revert to the 2022-2023 fiscal year salary and expense allowances, including those increases tied to the annual increases in the CPI-W as provided in section 2-29 of the City Code.”

So, the mayor and the commissioners get their old salaries back with regular raises — 17 months from now — and for the six months or so that Castro and Fernandez will have left in office before their term is up. That sounds fair and non retaliatory at all.

Because it seems way too harsh, some have speculated that Lago is using that option as leverage to get the other items passed, which include the elimination of the car allowance, a requirement to get a four-fifths vote prior to spending any general reserve monies (unless there is a declared state of emergency), the addition of two new members to the charter review committee, to be appointed by the city manager and city attorney, and a rollback of commission expense accounts from $10,000 too $5,000 a year — for a whopping savings of $25,000.

But, wait. Lago goes further on this one, too.

The resolution also “amends the policy for allowable uses,” it says. Those uses include event tickets and donations to schools, which are understandable, but it also includes mass mailings and the printing of materials — like, say, the welcome packets that Castro gives to new homeowners with a lot of useful information.

Seems really petty. And certainly not in the best interest of the city. This is all revenge. The cost of opposing the great Lago.

There’s also an item to change the rules on public comments. That one may as well be called the Maria Cruz ordinance because it aims to limit public comments to only specific items on the agenda or the public comment period. Maria Cruz is a gadfly activist that speaks on many issues, sometimes too many issues. She used to be Lago’s buddy, but has become one of his most outspoken critics and led the failed recall against him last year. This is just a way to silence her. And others.

But remember, Lago is all about transparency.

Read related: Vince Lago scores with Richard Lara’s Coral Gables commission runoff win

As usual, Lago did not return calls and texts to his phone. But in that Community Newspaper piece, he writes his proposed changes will “bring clarity and decorum back to our public meetings.”

Lago also wants to put two questions on the ballot: One would ask citizens if they want to establish an Inspector General and the other would ask them if they want to convene a charter review committee every 10 years beginning in 2035 — which sounds like a way to get rid of the charter review committee for 10 years. Aren’t they supposed to convene after every U.S. Census?

But the mayor won’t risk the election date change on a referendum. He will try to do that by ordinance on Tuesday. Because he really doesn’t care whether the people of Coral Gables want it or not, and he’s not going to take the same chance as he did with the annexation of Little Gables, which voters overwhelmingly rejected. He’s not going to leave it up to them.

That item on the agenda Tuesday would change the date of the next general election from April 13, 2027 to November 03, 2026, and moving all subsequent elections to November. This would result in a four-month reduction for everyone. But for Castro and Fernandez, first. It would also expand the runoff period from two weeks to four and move the swearing-in date to five weeks after the election. Both the next election and the ballot questions would be on the Nov. 3, 2026 ballot.

So, basically, by the end of Tuesday, Coral Gables may change the way it’s elected its commission for 100 years. Happy centennial!

Unless, that is, either Vice Mayor Rhonda Anderson and newly-elected Commissioner Richard Lara — who Lago thinks he has in his pocket — insist on this going to the voters. As said in Political Cortadito before, this will be Lara’s first test. Lago is not wasting any time testing his loyalty. Will herbier stamp everything? Or push back a little?

There’s also a discussion item on the city manager, which was a central point of Lago’s re-election campaign — and his revenge tour.

Read related: Coral Gables Vince Lago may move to bring back City Manager Peter Iglesias

Several people have tried to convince Lago not to fire City Manager Alberto Parjus and hire former city manager Peter Iglesias back. “But he was my mentor,” Lago reportedly whined to the city clerk in the parking lot at the flag raising ceremony for the centennial, where a business leader took Lago aside for a word of advice: Stop it. Okay, two words.

Several city employees and supporters — including his campaign manager Jesse Manzano and former Miami-Dade Commissioner Kevin Cabrera, before he left for his post as U.S. Ambassador to Panama — reportedly asked him to keep his cool and, specifically, not to fire Parjus. They said he’s not feeling it and would rather “blow everything up.”

In other words, he’s going nuclear. Scorched Earth mode.

L’Ego isn’t letting up on the public meltdowns and personal attacks on Commissioner Castro, either. The incident at El Carnaval de Barranquilla last weekend — where Lago called her names in front of her 8-year-old son and refused to stand on stage with her and the organizers — was not an isolated event. On Thursday, at the ribbon cutting for Plenitude Spa on Aragon Avenue, Lago made a repeat performance — refusing to stand with and walking away from a group photo with Castro — and even told someone, in captured cellphone video, that he was not going to stop behaving like a toddler and disrespecting her.

“This is the way it’s going to be from now on, until the next election,” he is heard saying to someone. Ladra thinks it is Belkys Perez, the city’s Economic Development Director. “This is the way it’s going to be.”

Somehow, Ladra doesn’t think this is what the voters wanted when they returned him to office.

The next election is in 2027 and the mayor just threatened to humiliate and embarrass an opposing commissioner for two years.

Oh, wait. Shave four months off that.

Earlier, when he was standing at one end of the group photo and Castro at the other, Lago broke out of the line, like a true diva. “I can’t. I can’t. I won’t,” he said, and you could almost see him bring the back of his hand to his forehead. Oh, the agony!

“Listen, Belkys, Belkys, I will not take any pictures unless they’re…” and the cellphone video sound trails off because Lago is not the focus of the event. Even though he thinks he ought to be. The mayor is heard again when he raises his voice to direct the show. “So, let’s take a picture the three of us and then take a picture with the commissioner after. Let’s respect that. Let’s do that.”

People look uncomfortable.

He also refused to cut the ribbon with Castro. “There has to be a standard here,” Lago is heard saying. “You can either have the actual mayor or you can have the commissioner.

But you’re not going to have both.”

¡Que pena! What a show!

Just outside the door, as Castro is taking her pictures, is when he is caught in the background, talking to Perez, probably. “Nope. You do enough damage to my family, to my wife and my kids, I gotta draw the line,” Lago said.

Read related: Coral Gables Mayor Vince Lago lashes out at Commissioner Melissa Castro

Castro doesn’t know what he’s talking about. She has seen Mrs. Lago maybe twice ever — the woman is not as visible as Mrs. Francis Suarez — and never uttered a word to her or his daughters, she said.

“Mayor Lago has made it clear both through his actions and his words that he intends to wear me down,” Castro told Political Cortadito. “He even said he was going to have me at ‘pico y pala.’ That phrase is used to describe someone being broken down bit by bit. This is not just disrespected, it’s targeted, intentional and deeply inappropriate behavior from someone in pubic office.

“When the mayor says he’s going to have me ‘a pico y pala,’ he’s admitting what so many of us already see: This is about power, not service,” Castro said. “It’s about breaking a woman down, not building a city up. But I was elected by the people and I will not let anyone chip away at my voice.

“He intends to wear me down, humiliate me repeatedly or break my spirit little by little,” Castro said. “These public power plays only hurt the very people we’re here to support — our residents and local businesses.

“It’s upsetting to be treated this way in front of our community, especially as a woman, a mother and an elected official.”

Ironically, when Lago went to say a few words at last week’s ribbon cutting — he went on and on about how much he respects women. “I always like to see women entrepreneurs,” he said to the women who own and operate the spa. “And as the father of two young girls I’m pushing them to be exactly like you.

“We need strong women who do the right thing, take risks and start a business,” he said.

Ladra half expected him to be struck by lightning.

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