Miami — the only major U.S. city founded by a woman — now has its first female mayor. Eileen Higgins, a city commissioner who has championed public transit, housing affordability, and climate resilience, was elected mayor of Miami in a runoff election, becoming the first woman to hold the office in the city’s 128-year history. The milestone closes a long symbolic gap in a city whose very existence traces back to the vision and determination of a woman.
At a glance
- Miami’s first female mayor: Eileen Higgins was elected in a runoff and now leads a city of more than 442,000 residents and one of the most economically significant metro areas in the United States.
- Historic founding: Miami is widely recognized as the only major American city founded by a woman — Julia Tuttle, a citrus grower and landowner who persuaded railroad magnate Henry Flagler to extend his rail line south, leading to Miami’s incorporation on July 28, 1896 C.E.
- Diverse city, historic office: Miami is a majority-Hispanic city where more than 70% of residents identify as Hispanic or Latino, and where representation in civic leadership has long reflected — and sometimes lagged behind — its extraordinary demographic complexity.
A city built by women, finally led by one
The story of Miami’s founding is unusual in American urban history. Julia Tuttle, a Cleveland-born landowner and citrus grower, owned the land on which Miami was built. After the Great Freeze of 1894–1895 C.E. devastated crops across Florida but left her groves intact, she sent orange blossoms north to Henry Flagler as proof of South Florida’s promise — and persuaded him to extend the Florida East Coast Railway to the region.
That act of persuasion triggered Miami’s official incorporation. Tuttle became known as “the mother of Miami.” Yet for more than a century after her pivotal role, no woman had ever served as the city’s mayor.
Higgins’s election changes that. A longtime advocate for sustainable urban development, she has focused her political career on expanding public transportation options in a city that remains heavily car-dependent, and on addressing the acute housing affordability pressures facing Miami residents across income levels.
Climate and affordability at the center
The timing of Higgins’s election carries additional weight. Miami faces some of the most serious climate risks of any large American city. The metro sits at an average elevation of just six feet above sea level, and projections from Resources for the Future place Miami among the cities globally most vulnerable to storm damage and coastal flooding. Sea levels along Florida’s coastline are measurably rising, with estimates suggesting Miami could experience between 21 and 40 inches of additional sea level rise by 2070 C.E.
Miami Beach has already invested $500 million in protective infrastructure — raising roads, reinforcing water systems, and building barriers. Higgins inherits both that momentum and the deeper policy questions it raises about who bears the cost of adaptation and who gets protected first.
Housing is the other defining challenge. Miami’s rapid growth — driven by high-rise construction in Brickell, Edgewater, and Downtown — has pushed up costs across the city. The non-Hispanic Black population, which peaked near 90,000 in 1990 C.E., has fallen to roughly 52,000 in recent years, with gentrification and rising rents in neighborhoods like Liberty City and Little Haiti cited as key factors. Any serious affordability agenda will require confronting those dynamics directly.
A gateway city with a complex history
Miami’s identity is rooted in migration, labor, and the convergence of cultures from across the Caribbean and Latin America. Bahamian immigrants formed a critical portion of Miami’s construction and service workforce during the city’s early decades, contributing essential labor to roads, hotels, and urban expansion that mainstream histories have often underacknowledged. Cuban exiles who arrived after 1959 C.E. reshaped the city’s economy and culture, and by 1985 C.E. Miami had elected its first Cuban-born mayor. Caribbean, Central American, South American, and Haitian communities have each added distinct threads to the city’s civic fabric.
That diversity also means Miami’s politics are genuinely complex. The city has shifted rightward in recent election cycles, with Hispanic voters — particularly Cuban Americans — moving toward Republican candidates in ways that surprised many national observers. Higgins’s victory navigates that landscape and signals continued voter appetite for candidates focused on practical urban governance: transit, housing, resilience.
What the milestone means
Firsts carry weight not because the number matters in itself, but because of what took so long. Miami has been home to extraordinary women leaders — from Tuttle’s founding role to the generations of activists, educators, and community organizers who shaped the city’s neighborhoods — without that leadership being reflected in the mayor’s office.
That the milestone arrives as Miami confronts its most consequential governance challenges — sea level rise, affordability, transportation, and demographic change — makes Higgins’s election something more than symbolic. It is a test of whether a city can rise to difficult problems with leaders who reflect the full range of people living through them.
One complexity worth naming: a historic first in the mayor’s office does not resolve structural inequities in who holds power across Miami’s institutions, who benefits from the city’s prosperity, and who bears the burden of its pressures. Those questions will outlast any single election.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Miami
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Ghana establishes a new marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- Indigenous land rights get a major boost ahead of COP30
- The Good News for Humankind archive on the United States
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