Miami wants another day in court: City asks for rehearing in election case
Published in News & Features
MIAMI — The city of Miami wants another day in court.
Last week, a three-judge panel with Florida’s 3rd District Court of Appeal upheld a lower court’s ruling that found the city’s decision to postpone the November 2025 election to 2026 without voter approval was unconstitutional.
After two losses in court, the city is now asking for another shot. In a motion filed late Wednesday, the city requested a rehearing en banc, which means the entire appellate court would hear the case rather than a three-judge panel. The motion was authored by attorney Dwayne Robinson, whom the city hired as outside counsel for the case.
The 3rd District Court of Appeal ruling landed two days after the three-judge panel heard oral arguments from the city, as well as from the attorney for mayoral candidate Emilio González, who sued in June after the Miami City Commission voted 3-2 to postpone the election to 2026 via ordinance rather than through a ballot referendum.
The appellate court agreed with a Miami-Dade Circuit Court judge, finding that moving the election date and changing the terms of office for the city’s elected officials requires voter approval via ballot referendum. Both courts ruled that the city’s ordinance was unconstitutional.
González issued a statement in response to the city’s latest motion, saying the case is about “an out of control government trying to steal an election from the people of Miami.”
“The City’s desperate appeals are a blatant attempt to run out the clock, hoping to prevent the Miami-Dade Supervisor of Elections from preparing a ballot,” González said. “This isn’t just irresponsible — it’s reprehensible. It’s a coordinated assault on the democratic rights of our citizens.”
Elections attorney Juan-Carlos Planas, who represented North Miami residents when the city similarly moved its elections from odd to even years via ordinance, said the vast majority of requests for a rehearing en banc are denied. A denial is especially likely in this case, he said, because there was no dissent among the appellate judges.
Planas said the city could have petitioned directly to the Florida Supreme Court if it wanted to. Asking for a rehearing before the 3rd District Court of Appeal, he said, causes additional delays.
The city’s motion lands less than three months before the scheduled Nov. 4, 2025, election, when residents are expected to vote on a new mayor and two city commissioners.
“The fact that they asked for a rehearing en banc this late is just — it’s kind of underhanded,” Planas said.
During a hearing last month before Miami-Dade Circuit Court Judge Valerie Manno Schurr, the parties stated that they need a final decision on appeal by Aug. 8.
Oren Rosenthal, an attorney for the county Elections Department, said at the hearing that the county is able to conduct the election on Nov. 4, “as long as we have a list of qualified candidates by Sept. 20.”
Todd Hannon, the city clerk, said Thursday that his office is “ramping up” for the candidate qualifying period to begin in a few weeks. According to Hannon, candidate qualifying must begin on Sept. 5 and run through Sept. 20 in order for the election to take place on Nov. 4.
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