A Historic Win in Unexpected Territory
Miami just did something it hasn't done since the late 1990s: elected a Democrat as mayor. Eileen Higgins defeated Republican Emilio Gonzalez in Tuesday's runoff election, and Decision Desk HQ called it with the Associated Press reporting a commanding 19-point margin. That makes Higgins both the first Democratic mayor and the first female mayor Miami has seen in nearly three decades.
The timing is particularly interesting. Higgins will now lead a Hispanic-majority city of roughly 487,000 people sitting squarely in President Donald Trump's Florida stronghold. This is the same Miami-Dade County that flipped to Trump from Joe Biden in 2024. Republicans had controlled the mayor's office since the late 1990s, making this flip a symbolic victory for Democrats even if the position is officially nonpartisan.
La Gringa's Message: Affordability Over Culture Wars
Higgins, a former Miami-Dade County commissioner who earned the nickname "La Gringa" for her Spanish-speaking outreach, built her campaign around three core themes: affordability, ethics in local government, and protecting immigrants. She frequently criticized Trump's record and positioned herself as the antidote to what she called dehumanizing rhetoric.
"We are facing rhetoric from elected officials that is so dehumanizing and cruel, especially against immigrant populations," Higgins told the AP after her victory speech. She pledged to treat the officially nonpartisan role as a full-time job focused on housing and basic services rather than culture-war battles.
National Spotlight and Big-Name Endorsements
For a mayoral race, this one drew an unusually star-studded cast. Trump, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Sen. Rick Scott all lined up behind Gonzalez. On the Democratic side, Pete Buttigieg, Rahm Emanuel and Rep. Ruben Gallego stumped or endorsed for Higgins. Both parties treated the race as a potential preview of the 2026 midterms, which explains why so much national firepower descended on one city election.
The Crypto Mayor's Exit
Higgins' victory also closes the chapter on outgoing Republican Mayor Francis Suarez, a crypto-enthusiast who actively courted Bitcoin (BTC) miners, backed the ultimately failed MiamiCoin project, and once floated the idea of taking his salary in Bitcoin. The contrast between Suarez's tech-forward, crypto-friendly approach and Higgins' focus on bread-and-butter affordability issues couldn't be starker.
What It Means for Democrats in Florida
For Democrats, this win represents a rare bright spot in Florida after years of Republican gains among Cuban, Venezuelan and Nicaraguan voters. It adds another data point to the party's argument that Trump's hold on key urban and suburban centers might be loosening, even in states trending red. Whether one mayoral race in a nonpartisan election signals a broader shift remains to be seen, but Democrats are certainly taking the win as evidence that their message can still resonate in unlikely places.