Wednesday, December 16, 2009

State Senate candidate Representative Julio Robaina, in his own words ... by gimleteye

After the Eyeonmiami post about the money pouring into the race for Miami Dade Senate District 36, I spoke on the phone with State Representative Julio Robaina (House District 117). Robaina is running for Senate District 36 in Nov. 2010 against former Miami Dade County Commissioner Miguel Diaz de la Portilla. I was curious about the apparent advantage of Diaz de la Portilla in fundraising. The state senate seat is currently held by Miguel's brother, Alex Diaz de la Portilla who is Senate Majority leader.

As a young county commissioner fifteen years ago, Miguel Diaz de la Portilla was a champion of community activists: no longer. While he was progressive, then, on principles of good growth management including community councils and advocating for a supermajority vote, today he is a board member of the Builders Association of South Florida-- a principal in the "growth at any cost" policies that helped plunge the economy into the worst crisis since the Depression. After leaving public service and running unsuccessfully for county mayor, Diaz de la Portilla joined the Miami law firm, Becker Poliakoff where he heads the Government Law and Lobbying practice in Miami-Dade, often appearing on behalf of advocates for suburban sprawl he once fought.

Robaina is an employee of ATT. As state representative, Robaina says that his main focus has been consumer protection. "For 8 years I have fought to protect condo unit owners. My number one opponent and nemesis for years has been the law firm where Diaz de la Portilla works. "We tried to pass a law to go after attorneys who give false and misleading information to boards, guess who opposed us? Becker Poliakoff fought us on every piece of legislation we tried to pass… when I fix problems in state law, guess what law firm loses business?" Robaina is also chair of the Florida House Joint Legislative Committee on Everglades Oversight.

From Robaina's point of view, the undisclosed motives of money aligning with the brother of a majority leader in the state senate deserve to be brought to light. "Tallahassee knows the money game the same way they know the name of their children, but South Florida never knows what is going on. This case is about one brother who is a Senate Majority leader, whose says if I see your name on a campaign donation list, you will have problems. You will not get your legislation done in Tallahassee. It's a good old fashioned shake down."

Why would Miguel Diaz de la Portilla trade out of a job that makes hundreds of thousands a year for one, in state government, that makes only $30,000? "It is about power. I’m working at a regular job for a living. The other side is trying to do what the Diaz Balarts did; he gets his family seat in Congress."

Robaina believes that in the upcoming re-districting based on a new census, that Alex Diaz de la Portilla--who is term limited out and cannot run again for District 36-- is planning to carve out a Congressional seat, the same way that the other political family of Miami, the Diaz Balarts, did in a new seat that was virtually gifted to now Congressman Mario Diaz Balart.

Robaina says, "Alex Diaz de la Portilla is Senate majority leader. He has told every lobbyist, he is going to kill their legislation if they don't give to Miguel's campaign. Four people have gone to State Attorney’s Office complaining that they have been shaken down for campaign contributions. Miguel doesn’t have to have fundraisers. His money comes from all these special interest groups. If Alex were my brother, you’d see tons of money in my campaign coffers."

Still, Robaina likes his chances. "I have 85 percent positives. They dropped $6 million against Alex Villalobos in soft money when (then governor) Jeb Bush tried to take him out. Villalobos still won. When you stand up, you will get hammered. "They are going to paint me as “a bad Republican”. The whole deal here is going to be Robaina works for both parties."

16 comments:

Anonymous said...

Robaina is the best choice in this race. He has proven himself over and over - time and time again. De La Tortilla has no chance.

Anonymous said...

I'll be cutting Robaina a check today.

Anonymous said...

Julio sings a different tune when it comes to grassroots candidates in South Miami. There, he is happy to be aligned with the establishment and corrupt political machine

Anonymous said...

Seems like the grassroots candidate
in South Miami is having some ETHICS problems...

Anonymous said...

Don't let Robaina play you for a fool. He is one of the least effective members of the Dade delegation and has virtually nothing to show for his record in Tallahassee.

Anonymous said...

Thanks for writing Miguel.

Anonymous said...

Maybe you can write about Robaina crying on the floor of the House of Representatives when he flip-flopped all of the place on his vote for the telecommunications rate hike issue.

There's no crying in baseball.

Anonymous said...

I have met Robaina before, after he had served as Mayor of South Miami. He has always conducted himself with integrity, and, acts as a problem solver for the good of the community.

I really like the Entire Eye on Miami Blog, and follow the issues/posts about South Miami.
However, in reference to these earlier posts about Robaina's ethics and him not supporting "grassroots" candidates, that is a bunch of malarky. He has integrity and is working for the good of the South Miami community.

The people who are criticising Robaina are the same crazy conspiracy theorists who have praised the two South Miami Commissioners Newman and Beasley.
Newman causes incessant gridlock at Commission meetings, Beasley stands for nothing and has all sorts of rumors swirling behind his murky past, and their actions in firing the former city manager Ajibola might end up costing the city hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees.

Geniusofdespair said...

Last reader: Don't confuse posts with comments. Gimleteye and I write most of the posts: You out there write the comments. We did not write any posts like you are referring to. You must mean comments.

We print most comments unless they start getting ridiculous. We try to edit as little as possible but when it gets obvious that the opposing candidate's team is beating up on a candidate we start dumping comments. So far it is pretty tame. Just your average mud-slinging.

I like Beasley...friendly guy - you know how to sling a bit of mud yourself!

Anonymous said...

Do we even need to start comparing Diaz de la Portilla and Robaina? What has Robaina delivered to the district? NOTHING!! The Diaz de la Portilla family have been committed public servants to district 36 and Miami Dade County. Robaina has done nothing.

born in miami said...

Robaina is not just against bad development, he is against ALL development. He is against growth because he wants to maintain the little control he has in the district. He is afraid of losing that control. He doesnt want new people to move into the district and risk them being smart enough to see past him.

condo owner said...

How many of Julio's bill's that he talks about actually get passed? If any of them did it would cost condo owners thousand's more. He makes people who live in condos out to sound like they are big bad people. I live in a condo, my friend's live in condos and I would like to think we are good people. I would never vote for Julio.

Anonymous said...

Julio Robaina is correct about the Diaz De La Portilla GANG. They need to be pushed out NOW. Alex, Miguel and Reinier as well as their cronies. Support change, support Julio Robaina and whomever else is fighting this corrupt family. Don't believe me? Google the trio for the surprising truth. Not rumors, but the truth and proven by their debt, tactics and lack of respect for election laws. Here is a quick link. Alex Diaz De La Portilla owes over a million dollars and gambles his wife's savings. Great politician.

http://www.miamiherald.com/news/southflorida/story/1385735.html?mi_pluck_action=comment_submitted&qwxq=7682974#Comments_Container

Sen. Diaz de la Portilla claimed a few years back that he was too cash-strapped to pay a $17,000 fine to the Florida Elections Commission for failure to comply with elections laws. During a hearing, a review of the senator's bank and credit-card statements depicted him as a big cash spender who frequents casinos in Biloxi and Las Vegas.

Unknown said...

The comparison of these 2 candidates couldnt be easier.

Diaz de La Portilla:
Law School graduate
sccessful attorney
Married for 23 years
3 chiildren
A real reformer

Robaina:
Career politician
never been married
no children
ranked among the least effective legislators in tally.

The choice is clear. We dont need a career politicans with no real roots representing us. We need a family man who shares our values.

Geniusofdespair said...

Yael what is that you say, 23 children? My God he has been busy.

So you are saying that you have to be married and have children to be effective? Someone should take away your right to vote. That is what you base your votes on: procreation? Sorry your argument is pretty lame. Your logic would give us some pretty bad candidates. WE DO NOT NEED A FAMILY MAN WHO SHARES OUR VALUES. Values are for church.
Get off this blog.

Anonymous said...

Yael, when you imply it is better to vote for an attorney, in this case a Diaz de la Portilla, you fail to mention his lobbying efforts. How much have the DLP's really made while holding that District 36 Senate seat? Thousands? Millions? You fail to mention about his divorce. A family man? Let's ask his wife! I think it's time to pass it on to simple man, Julio Robaina, a Bellsouth employee who thinks and lives like we do and does not accept dirty money.