Miami, FL
‘Have a plan’: Arnie Weiss launches campaign for Miami-Dade Supervisor of Elections
Digital media entrepreneur Arnold “Arnie” Weiss thinks the other three candidates running for Miami-Dade Supervisor of Elections (SOE) don’t have the technical know-how to improve the county’s voting processes.
But he does, he said, and that’s why he’s seeking the job.
Weiss, a Democrat whose work developing digital distribution solutions and user experiences saw him work for both government and private organizations, filed to run for SOE late last month.
He officially launched his campaign Friday.
“Voters in this county deserve a Supervisor who will actually have a plan for how they will improve the department along with a track record of delivering results,” Weiss said in a statement.
“Frankly, I did not see where any of the candidates who have entered this race have any of the prerequisite experience necessary to do the work at hand and that is why I have decided to run for Supervisor of Elections in Miami-Dade County in 2024.”
A longtime Miami-Dade resident now living in Miami, Weiss graduated from Syracuse University’s Newhouse School, where he studied producing for electronic media. His more than 25-year career included work for movie studios, digital properties, government agencies and several broadcast networks, including ABC, ESPN and CBS.
A press release from Weiss’ campaign said he has “taken on the county” twice about election matters. The first time, he said, was over the use of touch-screen voting in 2004, when system crashes in Miami-Dade resulted in lost electronic records.
More recently, the county notified him that he faced removal from its voter rolls for not voting — an issue the Florida Democratic Party has been sounding the alarm about following the passage of new election laws.
Weiss said that the office of the county’s currently appointed SOE, Christina White, “was very responsive” to his concerns about maintaining his active voter status. But it also took several days and an “exhaustive investigation” by the Department for the issue — which was due to “errors by the Post Office,” he said — to be rectified.
“It is clear we must improve the back-end processes to ensure that the information that the department provides to voters is accurate and that is just one of the jobs of the Supervisor, which neither of my (Primary) opponents are qualified to do,” he said.
Weiss said he’s “already created a detailed technical product and project roadmap” for the Miami-Dade Elections Department to make voting more accessible to everyone legally allowed to vote. It includes:
— Allowing voters to cast ballots at any precinct in the county on Election Day, the same as the county does currently for early voting.
— Eliminating issues that prevent the Department from getting citizens the information necessary to restore their voting rights.
— Updating the Department’s technology to secure precinct-level and mail-in voting, speed up processing time at polling places and retain images of ballots made by tabulators to ensure that the people voting by mail are registered voters.
— Using text and email messaging to contact residents if they’re at risk of being removed from the voter rolls, rather than the current system in which the Department relies solely on the postal system.
Weiss is set to face political consultant Willis Howard and former Rep. Juan Carlos “J.C.” Planas in an Aug. 20 Democratic Primary.
The winner will compete in the Nov. 5 General Election against Miami Rep. Alina García, who now has a clear path in the Republican Primary after two GOP opponents dropped out.
Miami-Dade voters abolished several constitutional officers — including SOE, Tax Collector and Property Appraiser — through the 1957 adoption of the county’s Home Rule Charter, which delegated their power to the Miami-Dade’s top executive official, now the county Mayor, who now appoints people to those positions.
But in 2018, Florida voters — including 58% of Miami-Dade voters — approved a constitutional amendment requiring every county in the state to elect those officers, as well as a Sheriff, by Jan. 7, 2025.
White confirmed last June that she would not seek election to the office she’s held by appointment since 2015.
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Miami, FL
MLS: Messi double helps Inter Miami slay Rapids in front of huge crowd
Argentine forward’s brace included the match winner against Colorado Rapids in front of over 75,000 fans in Denver.
Published On 19 Apr 2026
Lionel Messi scored a brace and German Berterame headed another as Inter Miami earned a 3-2 win over the Colorado Rapids in Major League Soccer (MLS) on Saturday in Denver.
Messi scored the go-ahead goal in the 79th minute. He started a run just inside midfield and went unchallenged until the box, where he blasted into the upper left corner for a 3-2 lead.
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Rafael Navarro and Darren Yapi each scored for Colorado (4-4-0, 12 points) in front of 75,824 at Empower Field, the second-largest crowd in MLS history.
Miami (4-1-3, 15 points) took a 1-0 lead in the 18th minute after Colorado goalkeeper Zack Steffen’s pass was intercepted by Yannick Bright. Josh Atencio offered a hard challenge and was shown a yellow card after video review.
Messi took the resulting penalty and rolled his shot straight down the middle as Miami took a 1-0 lead.
Colorado had a solid look at the goal when midfielder Wayne Frederick attempted a one-touch lob. Miami goalkeeper Dayne St. Clair was out of position and well beyond the penalty arc after heading away a loose ball, but Frederick’s attempt sailed over the open net.
In the fifth minute of first-half stoppage time, Miami extended their lead to 2-0, connecting on a series of passes deep in their attacking third. Messi got the run of play started with a tight touch pass to Rodrigo De Paul.
De Paul sent Mateo Silvetti on a run to the boundary line. His inward-spinning cross floated to the front of goal, where Berterame rose above the Colorado defence and tucked a header under the bar.
Navarro’s goal cut Miami’s lead to 2-1. He started a run in midfield and used a step-over move to get an open shot a few steps into the box that tucked inside the left post past a diving St. Clair in the 58th minute.
In the 62nd minute, second-half substitute Yapi settled on a direct pass from Lucas Herrington and sizzled a shot past St. Clair for the equaliser.
Miami closed the win playing a man down as Yannick Bright was sent off with a red card in the 87th minute.
Miami, FL
Former Titans GM mock Miami right tackle to the Cleveland Browns at 6
The Cleveland Browns traded for an extended right tackle, former Houston Texan Tytus Howard, at the start of free agency as they began their rebuild of the offensive line that was awful in 2025. But Howard has played every position on the offensive line except for center, so if it’s all about getting your best five on the field, which it should be, there’s a chance Howard doesn’t play at right tackle in 2026.
While doing a mock draft on Peter Schrager’s podcast, former Tennessee Titans general manager Ran Carthon had the Browns drafting Miami (FL) right tackle sixth overall. He talked about the issue with Howard, but said Mauigoa could either take over the tackle spot or be a really good guard.
Carthon said he knows that Mauigoa would be one of their best five, whether it is at guard or tackle. Some will say that a guy who may be best at guard isn’t worth the sixth overall pick, and I have to disagree. You should draft the best football players, and Francis Mauigoa is my highest-rated offensive lineman and seventh overall. It might be at guard, but I have a good feeling that Mauigoa will find a home in the NFL as a high-quality offensive lineman.
Miami, FL
Inventory drops for first time since 2023 as sales rebound across coastal Miami, beaches
Inventory of homes and condos across the coastal Miami mainland and Miami Beach and the barrier island markets fell in the first quarter, marking the first big inventory drops since 2023.
The Corcoran Group’s first quarter reports don’t cover all of Miami-Dade County, but they offer insight into how the coastal markets, which have a higher share of luxury properties, are performing.
In Miami Beach, Sunny Isles Beach, Bal Harbour, Bay Harbor Islands, Surfside, Miami Beach, Fisher Island and Key Biscayne, single-family home inventory dropped 15 percent annually to 398 listings, and condo inventory was down 13 percent to 3,919 listings.
On Miami’s coastal mainland markets, which include Aventura, Miami Shores, Upper East Side, Edgewater, downtown Miami, Brickell, Coral Gables and Coconut Grove, inventory slipped 4 percent to 4,584 condo listings and 555 single-family listings, down 6 percent year-over-year.
Here’s a closer look at the market:
Miami Beach and the barrier islands
Single-family sales rose 13 percent year-over-year to 85 closings, the first time they have increased since the second quarter of 2024. Condo closings rose 15 percent to 693 closings, the first increase since the last quarter of 2024.
Pricing dropped, with the median price of single-family homes down 4 percent to $3.5 million and the median condo price down 9 percent to $640,000. The average price per square foot was nearly flat at $1,119.
Still, buyers set records with their purchases. Billionaire Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg paid $170 million for the waterfront mansion at 7 Indian Creek Island Road, and Starbucks billionaire Howard Schultz paid $44 million, or $7,949 per square foot, for a penthouse at the Four Seasons Residences at The Surf Club.
Coastal mainland
Sales of single-family homes on the coastal mainland rose 16 percent to 220 closings. While markets like Coral Gables experienced declines in condo and single-family home sales, Coconut Grove home sales surged — up over 100 percent for single-family homes to 47 closings and up 55 percent to 87 condo closings. Condo sales rose 13 percent to 759 closings.
The median price of single-family homes across the coastal mainland rose 11 percent to just over $2 million. The median price of condos increased slightly, up 1 percent, to $602,000.
The priciest deals in the first quarter were the $32 million trade of 12 Tahiti Beach Island Road in Coral Gables, and the $19.8 million sale of a penthouse at Vita at Grove Isle.
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