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Tomás Regalado (American politician)

Tomás Pedro Regalado y Valdez (born May 24, 1947) is a Cuban American politician and former broadcast journalist who served as the 42nd mayor of Miami, Florida, from 2009 to 2017. He is a member of the Republican Party, although as Miami mayor his office was nonpartisan.[1]

Tomás Regalado
42nd Mayor of Miami
In office
November 11, 2009 – November 7, 2017
Preceded byManny Diaz
Succeeded byFrancis Suarez
Member of the Miami City Commission
from the 4th district
In office
November 1996 – November 2009
Succeeded byFrancis Suarez
Personal details
Born
Tomás Pedro Regalado y Valdez

(1947-05-24) May 24, 1947 (age 76)
Havana, Cuba
Political partyRepublican
Spouses
Raquel Ferreiro
(m. 1972; died 2008)
Ana Cristina Carrodeguas
(m. 2015)
Children3
Residence(s)Miami, Florida, U.S.

He served as the news director for Radio Mambí WAQI and as a reporter for Univisión. Regalado was elected mayor on November 3, 2009, and sworn in on November 11.

Early life and education edit

Born in Havana, Cuba, on May 24, 1947, Tomás Pedro Regalado was the first-born child of Tomás Regalado Molina and Carmen Rita Váldez de Regalado. His father was an attorney and a journalist who was the last president of the Cuban Association of Journalists and Reporters and a political prisoner under the U.S.-backed Batista dictatorship.[2] Prior to leaving Cuba, Tomás attended elementary school at La Salle Catholic School in Havana. In April 1962, when Tomás was 14, he and his younger brother Marcos were placed on a flight to Miami as participants of Operation Peter Pan. The two brothers lived at the boys' camp in Kendall and then Florida City for several months until their aunt, Silvia Váldez, claimed them. They lived with her until their mother arrived in Miami a year later.

In Miami, Regalado attended high school at Immaculata-Lasalle High School in Coconut Grove and then at the Lindsey Hopkins vocational school. He attended seminars at the University of Miami Koubek Center for journalism.[3]

Journalism career edit

 
Regalado, as Director of Office of Cuba Broadcasting at a BBG meeting in Washington, D.C.

Regalado became the youngest reporter on staff at WFAB, La Fabulosa. He quickly ascended from reporter to assistant producer. At twenty one, Regalado was hired by WCKT (now WSVN) an NBC affiliate as the Latin American news editor and host of the news program Tele-Amigo. After two years at WCKT then Channel 7, Regalado returned to WFAB as a news producer and anchor.

In 1974, Regalado became a reporter for WLTV Channel 23 but returned to radio in 1977 as the news director in charge of all programming for La Fabulosa, WFAB. In 1970, Regalado decided to leave the news desk and became the station's first international news correspondent. In the years that followed, Regalado traveled to Africa and covered the civil war in Angola, the riots in Soweto, South Africa and the civil war in Mozambique.

Regalado had interviewed Presidents Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter. In 1983, he became the first Cuban American member of the White House Press Corps. As a member of the Press Corps, Regalado traveled with Presidents Ronald Reagan, George H. W. Bush, and Bill Clinton. Regalado accompanied the presidents on their foreign trips, including but not limited to summits from 1983 to 1993 and met such figures as Mikhail Gorbachev, Boris Yeltsin, and Anwar Al Sadat. In this time period, Regalado also covered the presidential campaigns and national party conventions.

In 1986, Regalado was approved as an applicant to NASA's Journalist in Space Program which was canceled after the Challenger explosion. While a full-time news director on Spanish-language radio Regalado also worked for El Miami Herald as a weekly columnist. Regalado covered the civil war in Nicaragua and El Salvador and has visited over 78 countries throughout the world. Along with his wife Raquel, Tomas spoke several times before the Human Rights Commission of United Nations in Geneva Switzerland against human rights violations in Cuba.

In June 2018, Regalado was sworn in as the Director of the Office of Cuba Broadcasting (OCB).[4]

Political career edit

Miami Commissioner (1996–2009) edit

On September 3, 1996, Regalado was elected in a special election for city commissioner, vacated by newly elected Mayor Joe Carollo.[5] He defeated CC Reed.[6]

One week after his election, the city of Miami's economic crisis was exposed by Operation Green Palm and an oversight board was installed. Governor Lawton Chiles declared Miami a state of financial emergency.[7] He opposed laying off police officers saying "The police have been the darling of the city of Miami."[8]

During that time, he kept the news director position in the Spanish Broadcasting Systems by working as a daily host and commentator on WWFE la Poderosa and a host of a daily news program on the Cable Network TeleMiami.

Regalado won re-election in 1999 (unknown), 2003 (unopposed),[9] and 2007 (90%).[10]

Mayor of Miami (2009–2017) edit

 
Regalado speaks at a grand opening of affordable housing community in Miami.

On November 3, 2009, Regalado was elected Miami's 42nd Mayor with 72% of the vote.

He kept his promise he would lower his salary by $50,000 as well as reducing his pension by 25%. In 2012 he received from the hands of Roman Viotto Leandro Award "Referrer" awarded by the Foundation Young Leaders. Regalado said in August 2011: "I feel like Bill Clinton. Some people really hated him, and some people loved him."[11]

Regalado said of his goals: "Do I have a vision? Keep taxes down. Reduce the size of government. Fix the potholes. Fix the streets. Pick up the garbage." His biggest accomplishments are balancing the budget three times and striking deals with the unions.

Regalado was re-elected to a second term in office in 2013 with 78% of the vote, garnering over 20,000 votes out of over 26,000 votes cast.

Regalado got national attention for challenging President Donald Trump on the issue of sea level rise.[12] Prior to leaving office, Regalado placed on the ballot and campaigned for a sea level rise bond which received overwhelming support.[13]

Personal life edit

Regalado married a fellow radio commentator, Raquel Ferreiro, in 1972 at St. Hugh Catholic Church in Coconut Grove. The couple were married for thirty-seven years, until Ferreiro's death in 2008. Since 2015, Regalado has been married to Ana Cristina Carrodeguas.[14]

Regalado's father was a political prisoner. In 1979, Tomás Regalado Molina, was released from prison thanks to the intercession of the then President of Costa Rica, Rodrigo Carazo. Regalado Sr. worked alongside his son and daughter-in-law as a producer and news editor at WRHC, the Cadena Azul, and was also a contributor to el Diario de las Americas and El Nuevo Herald until his sudden death in 1995 at the age of 74. Regalado's mother, Carmen Rita, died soon after in 1998.

Regalado has three children:

  • His eldest son, Tomás N. Regalado, known as Tommy, is an anchor and producer at TV Marti with political ambitions. In April 2017, he announced his candidacy to City Council for District 3.[15] He was defeated in the general election in November 2017.
  • His daughter, Raquel Regalado, is an attorney and was an elected Miami-Dade County Public School Board member for six years representing District 6 and ran for Mayor of Miami-Dade County in 2016. She became a candidate after taking on the proposed Courthouse tax, and took the incumbent Mayor, Carlos A. Giménez, to an unexpected run off.[16] She eventually lost to Giménez, a Republican who supported Hillary Clinton.[17] She later ran for Florida's 27th congressional district, after the incumbent, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, said she would not be running for re-election.[18] However, she dropped out in November 2017. She currently represents the District 7 seat of the Miami-Dade County Commission.[19]
  • His youngest son, José, volunteered for a few years in his father's office, shortly after he began to work in adventure television. As of 2017, he is a legislative aide to Miami's Commissioner from the 4th district, Manolo Reyes.[20]

References edit

Specific
  1. ^ http://miamidadecode.org/3.03/
  2. ^ "Efemérides septiembre". Cuba Periodistas (in Spanish). Unión de Periodistas de Cuba. Retrieved May 17, 2017. Tomás Regalado
  3. ^ "City of Miami - Official Website". Miamigov.com. Retrieved November 6, 2013.
  4. ^ "Tomás P. Regalado". bbg.gov.
  5. ^ Miami Herald: Search Results
  6. ^ Miami Herald: Search Results
  7. ^ Miami Herald: Search Results
  8. ^ Miami Herald: Search Results
  9. ^ "Miami City Commissioner - District 4 Race - Nov 04, 2003". Our Campaigns. Retrieved November 6, 2013.
  10. ^ "Miami City Commissioner - District 4 Race - Nov 06, 2007". Our Campaigns. Retrieved November 6, 2013.
  11. ^ Alvarado, Francisco (August 9, 2011). "Tomas Regalado Compares Himself to Bill Clinton". Blogs.miaminewtimes.com. Retrieved November 6, 2013.
  12. ^ Thomson, Jacquline (September 9, 2017). "GOP Miami mayor calls on Trump to talk climate change". The Hill.
  13. ^ . Miami Herald. Archived from the original on October 6, 2017.
  14. ^ Smiley, David (October 5, 2015). "Shhhhh. Miami mayor gets hitched". Miami Herald.
  15. ^ Smiley, David (April 25, 2017). "Son of Miami's mayor announces campaign for City Commission". Miami Herald. Retrieved April 30, 2017.
  16. ^ Bach, Trevor (January 27, 2015). "Raquel Regalado Took On the Establishment; Now She Wants to Run It". Miami New Times.
  17. ^ Hanks, Douglas (October 9, 2016). "Miami-Dade's Republican mayor: I am voting for Clinton". Miami Herald.
  18. ^ Smiley, David (February 12, 2018). "Regalado says she's running for Florida Senate seat as special election looms". Miami Herald.
  19. ^ "Official website for Miami-Dade County". Retrieved February 5, 2022.
  20. ^ Smiley, David (November 30, 2017). "The walls of this Miami politician's new City Hall office hid a surprise from 1989". Miami Herald.
General

External links edit

Political offices
Preceded by Mayor of the City of Miami
2009–2017
Succeeded by

tomás, regalado, american, politician, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, template. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Regalado and the second or maternal family name is Valdez Tomas Pedro Regalado y Valdez born May 24 1947 is a Cuban American politician and former broadcast journalist who served as the 42nd mayor of Miami Florida from 2009 to 2017 He is a member of the Republican Party although as Miami mayor his office was nonpartisan 1 Tomas Regalado42nd Mayor of MiamiIn office November 11 2009 November 7 2017Preceded byManny DiazSucceeded byFrancis SuarezMember of the Miami City Commissionfrom the 4th districtIn office November 1996 November 2009Succeeded byFrancis SuarezPersonal detailsBornTomas Pedro Regalado y Valdez 1947 05 24 May 24 1947 age 76 Havana CubaPolitical partyRepublicanSpousesRaquel Ferreiro m 1972 died 2008 wbr Ana Cristina Carrodeguas m 2015 wbr Children3Residence s Miami Florida U S He served as the news director for Radio Mambi WAQI and as a reporter for Univision Regalado was elected mayor on November 3 2009 and sworn in on November 11 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Journalism career 3 Political career 3 1 Miami Commissioner 1996 2009 3 2 Mayor of Miami 2009 2017 4 Personal life 5 References 6 External linksEarly life and education editBorn in Havana Cuba on May 24 1947 Tomas Pedro Regalado was the first born child of Tomas Regalado Molina and Carmen Rita Valdez de Regalado His father was an attorney and a journalist who was the last president of the Cuban Association of Journalists and Reporters and a political prisoner under the U S backed Batista dictatorship 2 Prior to leaving Cuba Tomas attended elementary school at La Salle Catholic School in Havana In April 1962 when Tomas was 14 he and his younger brother Marcos were placed on a flight to Miami as participants of Operation Peter Pan The two brothers lived at the boys camp in Kendall and then Florida City for several months until their aunt Silvia Valdez claimed them They lived with her until their mother arrived in Miami a year later In Miami Regalado attended high school at Immaculata Lasalle High School in Coconut Grove and then at the Lindsey Hopkins vocational school He attended seminars at the University of Miami Koubek Center for journalism 3 Journalism career edit nbsp Regalado as Director of Office of Cuba Broadcasting at a BBG meeting in Washington D C Regalado became the youngest reporter on staff at WFAB La Fabulosa He quickly ascended from reporter to assistant producer At twenty one Regalado was hired by WCKT now WSVN an NBC affiliate as the Latin American news editor and host of the news program Tele Amigo After two years at WCKT then Channel 7 Regalado returned to WFAB as a news producer and anchor In 1974 Regalado became a reporter for WLTV Channel 23 but returned to radio in 1977 as the news director in charge of all programming for La Fabulosa WFAB In 1970 Regalado decided to leave the news desk and became the station s first international news correspondent In the years that followed Regalado traveled to Africa and covered the civil war in Angola the riots in Soweto South Africa and the civil war in Mozambique Regalado had interviewed Presidents Richard Nixon Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter In 1983 he became the first Cuban American member of the White House Press Corps As a member of the Press Corps Regalado traveled with Presidents Ronald Reagan George H W Bush and Bill Clinton Regalado accompanied the presidents on their foreign trips including but not limited to summits from 1983 to 1993 and met such figures as Mikhail Gorbachev Boris Yeltsin and Anwar Al Sadat In this time period Regalado also covered the presidential campaigns and national party conventions In 1986 Regalado was approved as an applicant to NASA s Journalist in Space Program which was canceled after the Challenger explosion While a full time news director on Spanish language radio Regalado also worked for El Miami Herald as a weekly columnist Regalado covered the civil war in Nicaragua and El Salvador and has visited over 78 countries throughout the world Along with his wife Raquel Tomas spoke several times before the Human Rights Commission of United Nations in Geneva Switzerland against human rights violations in Cuba In June 2018 Regalado was sworn in as the Director of the Office of Cuba Broadcasting OCB 4 Political career editMiami Commissioner 1996 2009 edit On September 3 1996 Regalado was elected in a special election for city commissioner vacated by newly elected Mayor Joe Carollo 5 He defeated CC Reed 6 One week after his election the city of Miami s economic crisis was exposed by Operation Green Palm and an oversight board was installed Governor Lawton Chiles declared Miami a state of financial emergency 7 He opposed laying off police officers saying The police have been the darling of the city of Miami 8 During that time he kept the news director position in the Spanish Broadcasting Systems by working as a daily host and commentator on WWFE la Poderosa and a host of a daily news program on the Cable Network TeleMiami Regalado won re election in 1999 unknown 2003 unopposed 9 and 2007 90 10 Mayor of Miami 2009 2017 edit nbsp Regalado speaks at a grand opening of affordable housing community in Miami On November 3 2009 Regalado was elected Miami s 42nd Mayor with 72 of the vote He kept his promise he would lower his salary by 50 000 as well as reducing his pension by 25 In 2012 he received from the hands of Roman Viotto Leandro Award Referrer awarded by the Foundation Young Leaders Regalado said in August 2011 I feel like Bill Clinton Some people really hated him and some people loved him 11 Regalado said of his goals Do I have a vision Keep taxes down Reduce the size of government Fix the potholes Fix the streets Pick up the garbage His biggest accomplishments are balancing the budget three times and striking deals with the unions Regalado was re elected to a second term in office in 2013 with 78 of the vote garnering over 20 000 votes out of over 26 000 votes cast Regalado got national attention for challenging President Donald Trump on the issue of sea level rise 12 Prior to leaving office Regalado placed on the ballot and campaigned for a sea level rise bond which received overwhelming support 13 Personal life editRegalado married a fellow radio commentator Raquel Ferreiro in 1972 at St Hugh Catholic Church in Coconut Grove The couple were married for thirty seven years until Ferreiro s death in 2008 Since 2015 Regalado has been married to Ana Cristina Carrodeguas 14 Regalado s father was a political prisoner In 1979 Tomas Regalado Molina was released from prison thanks to the intercession of the then President of Costa Rica Rodrigo Carazo Regalado Sr worked alongside his son and daughter in law as a producer and news editor at WRHC the Cadena Azul and was also a contributor to el Diario de las Americas and El Nuevo Herald until his sudden death in 1995 at the age of 74 Regalado s mother Carmen Rita died soon after in 1998 Regalado has three children His eldest son Tomas N Regalado known as Tommy is an anchor and producer at TV Marti with political ambitions In April 2017 he announced his candidacy to City Council for District 3 15 He was defeated in the general election in November 2017 His daughter Raquel Regalado is an attorney and was an elected Miami Dade County Public School Board member for six years representing District 6 and ran for Mayor of Miami Dade County in 2016 She became a candidate after taking on the proposed Courthouse tax and took the incumbent Mayor Carlos A Gimenez to an unexpected run off 16 She eventually lost to Gimenez a Republican who supported Hillary Clinton 17 She later ran for Florida s 27th congressional district after the incumbent Ileana Ros Lehtinen said she would not be running for re election 18 However she dropped out in November 2017 She currently represents the District 7 seat of the Miami Dade County Commission 19 His youngest son Jose volunteered for a few years in his father s office shortly after he began to work in adventure television As of 2017 he is a legislative aide to Miami s Commissioner from the 4th district Manolo Reyes 20 References edit nbsp Biography portalSpecific http miamidadecode org 3 03 Efemerides septiembre Cuba Periodistas in Spanish Union de Periodistas de Cuba Retrieved May 17 2017 Tomas Regalado City of Miami Official Website Miamigov com Retrieved November 6 2013 Tomas P Regalado bbg gov Miami Herald Search Results Miami Herald Search Results Miami Herald Search Results Miami Herald Search Results Miami City Commissioner District 4 Race Nov 04 2003 Our Campaigns Retrieved November 6 2013 Miami City Commissioner District 4 Race Nov 06 2007 Our Campaigns Retrieved November 6 2013 Alvarado Francisco August 9 2011 Tomas Regalado Compares Himself to Bill Clinton Blogs miaminewtimes com Retrieved November 6 2013 Thomson Jacquline September 9 2017 GOP Miami mayor calls on Trump to talk climate change The Hill Miami s mayor seeks climate change converts among Miami s Republican voters Miami Herald Miami Herald Archived from the original on October 6 2017 Smiley David October 5 2015 Shhhhh Miami mayor gets hitched Miami Herald Smiley David April 25 2017 Son of Miami s mayor announces campaign for City Commission Miami Herald Retrieved April 30 2017 Bach Trevor January 27 2015 Raquel Regalado Took On the Establishment Now She Wants to Run It Miami New Times Hanks Douglas October 9 2016 Miami Dade s Republican mayor I am voting for Clinton Miami Herald Smiley David February 12 2018 Regalado says she s running for Florida Senate seat as special election looms Miami Herald Official website for Miami Dade County Retrieved February 5 2022 Smiley David November 30 2017 The walls of this Miami politician s new City Hall office hid a surprise from 1989 Miami Herald General HIStory Tomas Regalado Archived from the original on October 31 2009 http www miamiherald com 460 story 1328985 htmlExternal links editAppearances on C SPAN nbsp Political officesPreceded byManny Diaz Mayor of the City of Miami2009 2017 Succeeded byFrancis Suarez Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tomas Regalado American politician amp oldid 1163352717, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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