THE CAPTAIN REPORTS:
ELECTION CENTRAL 2026 - PART ONE
The Qualifying period is fast approaching, and several new candidates have recently filed paperwork indicating their intent to run for judicial office. Qualifying Week is set for April 20-24, 2026, with the primary election scheduled for August 18.
COUNTY COURT
There are 11 incumbent judges up for election this cycle. Only one currently faces opposition.
The headline: on April 1, perennial candidate Renier Diaz de la Portilla, filed to run in Group 38 of the County Court, challenging incumbent Judge Gordon Murray, Sr.
You may recall that the last time we wrote about Diaz de la Portilla, he was challenging another County Court Judge - Fred Seraphin - in the 2022 election cycle.
THE HISTORY OF CANDIDATE RENIER DIAZ DE LA PORTILLA
It’s a long one, so buckle up:
... 1996: Elected to the Miami-Dade School Board at the age of 25; served two years.
... 2000: Elected in a special election to the Florida House in District 115; served two years.
... 2002: Lost re-election in the Republican primary to J.C. Planas, 45%-43%.
... 2006-2012: Returned to and served again on the School Board.
... 2012: Ran in House District 103; lost to Manny Diaz Jr., 55%-39%.
... 2014: Ran for Circuit Court Judge; lost to Veronica Diaz 57%-43%.
... 2020: Ran for Miami-Dade County Commission, District 5; lost to Eileen Higgins, 53%-47%.
... 2022: Challenged incumbent Judge Fred Seraphin; lost 56%-44%.
In addition to these campaigns, Diaz de la Portilla has repeatedly sought appointment to the bench through the Judicial Nominating Commission (JNC), without success:
... 2016 (early): Applied for an open County Court seat.
... 2016 (later): Again applied when two additional County Court seats became available.
... 2019: Applied and interviewed for one of four open County Court seats; the JNC forwarded 23 names to the Governor - his was not one of them.
... 2020: Applied again for three open seats on the County Court; he was not appointed.
In 2022, The Captain published several critical pieces regarding Diaz de la Portilla's campaign for his actions in his campaign against Judge Seraphin. The Daily Business Review subsequently reported on those issues quoted from our posts. For those interested, we encourage revisiting:
SHAME ON YOU RENIER DIAZ DE LA PORTILLA, posted on July 28, 2022, which can be found here
RENIER DIAZ DE LA PORTILLA - YOU ARE OUT OF ORDER, posted on August 9, 2022, which can be found here
GET OUT THE HANDCUFFS ??? HAVE THE DIAZ DE LA PORTILLA BROTHERS BROKEN THE LAW ???, posted on August 13, 2022, which can be found here
INCUMBENT VULNERABILITY QUOTIENT
Back in 2022, we questioned why Diaz de la Portilla chose to challenge Judge Seraphin. Of the 15 Countyy Court Groups up for election, 12 incumbents went unopposed. Seraphin was one of four black judges running on the ballot that year, along with Miesha Darrough, Chiaka Ihekwaba, and Julie Harris Nelson.
In the 2026 cycle, Murray is the only black judge of the 11 incumbents. We have no evidence that Diaz de la Portilla choices - either in 2022 or now - were motivated by race.
To analyze competitiveness, we developed a metric: the Incumbent Vulnerability Quotient (IVQ), © 2026. The IVQ considers three factors:
1. Total contributions from donors (excluding candidate loans)
2. Number of individual contributors
3. Amount of money loaned by the candidate
The higher the score, the more vulnerable the incumbent.
As of March 31, 2026, the most vulnerable incumbents are:
Ritamaria Cuervo (25)
Luis Perez Medina (24)
Judge Moore, for example, ranked tenth of the eleven incumbents in both total contributions and number of contributors, and sixth in personal loans to her campaign - resulting in the highest IVQ score of 26.
At the other end of the spectrum, the least vulnerable incumbents are:
Donald Cannava (9)
Stephanie Silver (11)
Where does incumbent Judge Gordon Murray, Sr. fall?
He ranked fourth - just behind Judge Silver - with an IVQ score of 11. In other words, there are seven incumbent judges statistically more vulnerable than Murray.
Yet Murray is the one Diaz de la Portilla chose to challenge.
Why?
We asked Diaz de la Portilla that very question. If he responds, we will let you know.
Captain4Justice@gmail.com