Boston Herald

Disney, DeSantis must compromise

-

The goofy impasse between the Walt Disney Co. and the state of Florida is providing lots of red meat for Fox News, MSNBC and divisive partisans on both sides — but it’s bad for America.

It’s time for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Bob Chapek, CEO of Disney, to go together to Cinderella’s Royal Table, share some scrambled eggs, shake hands with Donald Duck and put an end to this nonsense.

They both know Disney cannot leave Florida, where it has billions of dollars in sunk costs, and Florida needs Disney, one of its biggest and most important employers. The rest is just political theater. And an embarrassm­ent to both parties. This fight, indicative of the nation’s schism on these matters, began when Florida enacted a piece of legislatio­n that says: “Classroom instructio­n by school personnel or third parties on sexual orientatio­n or gender identity may not occur in kindergart­en through grade 3 or in a manner that is not age-appropriat­e or developmen­tally appropriat­e for students in accordance with state standards.” Its proponents call the bill the “Parental Rights in Education” bill; its detractors have dubbed it the “Don’t Say Gay” bill. Neither side is likely to change its position anytime soon, even though this actually is a nuanced issue.

Chapek first tried to keep his company removed from the goings-on in Tallahasse­e. But he caved to pressure from his employees to take a stand and oppose the bill, ending political donations and offering a variety of other virtuesign­aling sanctions designed to appease those on the Disney payroll (no matter that Disney kept doing business in a variety of countries far more hostile to LGBTQ persons and issues than Florida).

That sparked a backlash in the Republican-led state legislatur­e, which moved to dissolve the sweetheart “Reedy Creek Improvemen­t District” deal that Walt Disney himself negotiated when Disney World was planned. In essence, the Reedy Creek giveaway gave Disney total control over what then was swampland and now is one of the premiere tourist draws in the world.

Here are two truths that emerge from this debacle.

First, corporate CEOs become involved in partisan political issues at their peril, and rarely to the benefit of their chief constituen­cy, namely the shareholde­rs of a public company.

Disney’s business model — the envy of the world — requires colossal numbers of both Republican­s and Democrats, and their internatio­nal equivalent­s, to walk through its gates, where they seek fun, family togetherne­ss and a vacation from the troubles of the outside world. Disney’s profitabil­ity requires that to be protected, and America is better for red and blue staters actually spending time together. Chapek has alienated conservati­ves and put that at risk.

Second, legislatio­n enacted out of a desire for revenge, and this surely fits that particular bill, almost never is good legislatio­n.

It might make DeSantis and the state feel better to nix the Reedy Creek deal in their pique, but hurting Disney, promoting it as a pariah company in the minds of a chunk of America, is an absurd position for the Florida governor to take.

We recommend a photo shoot with Chapek and DeSantis shaking hands, restating their mutual bond and announcing the cancellati­on of the legislatio­n dissolving Reedy Creek before it takes effect next year. They should restate their ongoing determinat­ion to protect what is so special to millions of families about Walt Disney World and vow never to mess with that in the future.

 ?? AP fiLe ?? THE MOUSE HOUSE: Mickey and Minnie wave to the crowd at Disney World in Florida.
AP fiLe THE MOUSE HOUSE: Mickey and Minnie wave to the crowd at Disney World in Florida.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States