After the election results in Miami-Dade County were announced, in which Cuban influencer Alexander Otaola came in third place with 12 percent of the votes, the former candidate responded in the same video where he explained to his followers how he felt after the electoral outcome and clarified that there is still "nothing lost," addressing artists who have promoted campaigns against him.
"The master (Alexis) Valdés who has made me a beautiful song and I have had so much fun. Just like the other comedians who have come out. Eduardo Antonio who is now also a comedian and has also made a song mocking and about things that seem wonderful to me because all of that is a repercussion of my campaign, all of that is a repercussion of my person, all of that is a repercussion of my actions, of my agenda," Otaola stated in a live broadcast from his Facebook last Thursday.
He also stated that: “You are working for me. I think it's fantastic.”
He also reproached them for not having seen them "making songs against the henchmen, I haven't seen them making parodies of the prices charged by the agencies so you can send medicine to your mother. I haven't seen those people, so Cuban, so human, so sensitive, making parodies and songs to criticize the shamelessness of the submission that is intended to be maintained from Miami with the exiles, using their own people in Cuba as hostages."
Otaola, known for his anti-communist stance and support for former President Donald Trump, finished a distant third in the elections last Tuesday, August 20, far behind the current mayor Daniella Levine Cava, who secured a second term with over 58% of the votes.
The influencer rejected the results and requested a recount of votes, a request that was denied by the Miami-Dade Elections Department.
The result was met immediately by artists with whom the former candidate has had heated controversies in the past, including Alexis Valdés and Eduardo Antonio, two of those mentioned in Otaola's video.
Alexis Valdés turned to Cristinito, unleashing the character's usual humor, based on wordplay, and in this case following a clear ultimate goal: mockery.
While Eduardo Antonio used music to celebrate the defeat of the presenter of the YouTube show Hola, Otaola.
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