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Miami Commissioner Ken Russell says he’ll run to challenge Marco Rubio for U.S. Senate

Commissioner Ken Russell, District 2, at the City of Miami commission meeting in Miami, Florida, Thursday, Jan. 9, 2020.
Commissioner Ken Russell, District 2, at the City of Miami commission meeting in Miami on Jan. 9, 2020. ctrainor@miamiherald.com

Miami’s surfboard-salesman-turned-politician is launching his second bid for higher office, only this time he’s aiming higher.

City Commissioner Ken Russell announced Thursday that he plans to challenge U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio in 2022, a surprise declaration from a Democrat with a relatively short record in partisan politics. His political career began with a long-shot 2015 campaign that saw him beat well-funded opponents with greater name recognition to represent Miami’s District 2, which includes most of the city’s waterfront.

Now, he’s a City Hall veteran with one aborted run at federal office already behind him. In the 2018 congressional race to replace then-Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, Russell dropped out of a crowded Democratic primary field, choosing to bow out rather than make the ballot — which, win or lose, would have forced him to resign from his city commission seat. He was easily reelected to a second and final four-year term on the commission in 2019.

Russell would have to resign from his commission seat effective no later than January 2023 if he officially qualifies next year to make the ballot for the Senate race.

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In casting his lot in the Democratic primary to challenge Rubio, a two-term Republican, he’ll likely face long odds once again. U.S Rep. Val Demings, a former Orlando police chief who played a central role in former President Donald Trump’s first impeachment trial and made President Joe Biden’s shortlist of potential running mates in 2020, is expected to launch a campaign for U.S. Senate, though she has not yet officially declared her candidacy.

“There will be naysayers,” said Russell, who creates original woodcarvings and once traveled the world as a champion yo-yo player, and later as a Russell Promotions representative. “They’ll say, ‘Who is this guy? A city commissioner?’ I say that I’m a neighbor who wants to solve problems.”

Florida’s U.S. Senate election is considered a pickup opportunity for Democrats in 2022, though Rubio’s status as a well-known incumbent likely puts the race a tier below other competitive states like Pennsylvania and North Carolina on the national map where incumbent Republicans are retiring. The Senate is currently split evenly between both parties, with Vice President Kamala Harris’ tie-breaking vote giving Democrats a slim margin of control.

South Florida Democratic strategist and lobbyist Evan Ross said Demings, who would be the country’s third Black woman senator if elected, is the presumptive favorite in the Democratic primary.

“Taking on Val Demings in the primary is mission impossible,” Ross said. “We’ll see if Ken can do a good Tom Cruise impression.”

Russell’s announcement came out of nowhere for party leadership and the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee — on Wednesday he said he’d only told his wife and close circle of advisers about his decision.

So far, little-known candidates Joshua Joseph Weil, Josue Larose, Allen Ellison and Edward Abud are the only declared candidates in the Democratic primary, according to Federal Election Commission and Florida Department of State records.

Russell, the son of a U.S. World War II veteran and Japanese professional yo-yo player, says he doesn’t mind if he’s considered an underdog once again.

“This is not about a career-seeking politician trying to move up,” he told the Herald in an interview Wednesday. “To me, this is about an average citizen trying to help my neighbors.”

To make his case, he’s billing himself as an everyman who will champion Florida’s environmental issues in Washington, from water quality to sea level rise to Everglades restoration. Sitting steps away from Biscayne Bay in downtown, he laid out the environmental theme of his campaign Wednesday while recalling his days as a fledgling activist demanding cleanup of the contaminated city park across the street from his house, and as a kitesurfing instructor who spent several hours a day in the water.

He said more federal dollars should be steered toward Florida water projects, and the Army Corps of Engineers’ approach to protecting coastal areas should have more green and less gray concrete. Russell, who has bolstered his partisan chops recently by leading the Florida Democratic Party’s Municipal Victory Program, described recent trips to Naples, Stuart and Pinellas County to talk to local officials about protecting the Biscayne Aquifer, restoring shorelines and safeguarding cities against rising tides fueled by climate change.

He likes to talk about his seat on the board of directors for the Everglades Trust.

“Where there’s water, there’s trouble,” he said. “And we need to work together to fix it.”

Miami Commissioner Ken Russell
Miami Commissioner Ken Russell Joey Flechas jflechas@miamiherald.com

The commissioner’s record at City Hall includes environmental initiatives such as limiting the use of fertilizers to prevent chemical runoff into the bay and restrictions on construction sites that allow contamination to flow into storm drains. Russell also advocated for the Miami Forever bond in 2017, when voters approved a plan to borrow $400 million to fund a wide range of city projects, including $192 million for drainage and anti-flooding projects.

In Miami, Russell’s political power has ebbed and flowed through his tenure. He’s twice served as commission chairman, allowing him to direct the flow of legislation and lead meetings. He’s also been stripped of leadership positions in city agencies that control millions of tax dollars in and around downtown, the result of political feuds on a commission where he has sometimes found himself on an island.

The future of the state’s environment is a bipartisan issue, Russell argued, that will make him a viable Democrat in a divided political landscape. Beating two-term incumbent Rubio, a bilingual, Miami-born Republican in an increasingly red state with a significant Hispanic population, will be challenging for any Democrat.

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In 2016, Rubio cleared the Republican primary field after ending his presidential run. He ultimately defeated Democratic Rep. Patrick Murphy for a second term with 52% of the vote, outpacing Trump’s performance in the state by four percentage points.

Rubio will likely have the Republican primary field to himself after Trump endorsed his reelection bid in April.

Fundraising could also be a challenge for Russell. Many donors to city commission candidates, Russell’s fundraising base, also support Republicans like Rubio at the federal level. National Democratic donors and big-money groups are likely to back Demings, according to multiple sources, leaving Russell in a potential no-man’s-land for campaign cash.

Russell, who has improved his Spanish over the years, is already taking jabs at Rubio. A three-minute video announcing his campaign opens with Russell comparing his woodworking to the kind of hands-on politics he says he’d bring to Washington. Later, he referenced Rubio’s controversial “small hands” comment about then-candidate Donald Trump during the 2016 presidential campaign.

“I like to work with my hands,” he says, “not worry about how big they are.”

During an interview with the Herald Editorial Board on Thursday afternoon, Mayor Francis Suarez said Russell called him early Thursday to let him know about the announcement. Suarez, a Republican, told the Herald he’s already pledged his support for Rubio, and he offered a frank assessment of his colleague’s chances.

“If he would have asked me for my opinion, I would have told him that I didn’t think it was such a good idea,” the mayor said. “And I think he knows that.”

Miami Commissioner Ken Russell says he’ll return donations to his defunct congressional campaign unless donors don’t want the money returned. He dropped out of a crowded Democratic primary field in 2018 to replace outgoing Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen.
Miami Commissioner Ken Russell says he’ll return donations to his defunct congressional campaign unless donors don’t want the money returned. He dropped out of a crowded Democratic primary field in 2018 to replace outgoing Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen. CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiherald.com

This story was originally published June 3, 2021 at 9:00 AM with the headline "Miami Commissioner Ken Russell says he’ll run to challenge Marco Rubio for U.S. Senate."

Joey Flechas
Miami Herald
Joey Flechas is an associate editor and enterprise reporter for the Herald. He previously covered government and public affairs in the city of Miami. He was part of the team that won the 2022 Pulitzer Prize for reporting on the collapse of a residential condo building in Surfside, FL. He won a Sunshine State award for revealing a Miami Beach political candidate’s ties to an illegal campaign donation. He graduated from the University of Florida. He joined the Herald in 2013.
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