Miami Herald

‘Boldness is your friend’: DeSantis boasts about successes in book-tour stop in Doral

- BY GRETHEL AGUILA gaguila@miamiheral­d.com Grethel Aguila: @GrethelAgu­ila

As Gov. Ron DeSantis took the stage Wednesday a short distance from a likely 2024 opponent’s Doral golf resort, he berated “wokeness” in media, business and politics, a common theme in his South Florida book-tour stop.

“We refuse to bow down to the woke mob because this state is where woke goes to die,” he said.

DeSantis reflected on his book “The Courage to Be Free: Florida’s Blueprint for America’s Revival” in an event hosted at Fire Tower Miami by And to the Republic, a group that promotes conservati­ve policy and, according to Politico, hosted DeSantis’ recent speeches to law-enforcemen­t officers in New York, Chicago and Philadelph­ia. The book is the requisite precursor to a likely 2024 presidenti­al campaign, which DeSantis is expected to announce this spring.

The governor’s stop could help set his potential campaign’s foundation in Florida’s most-populated county, which he flipped in the November elections. His appearance was about 10 minutes away from his ally-turned-rival’s turf: Trump National Doral Miami.

In the book, DeSantis lays out how the U.S. should be governed, heaping scorn on “administra­tive state,” “woke corporatio­ns” and “corporate media.” He rarely mentions former President Donald Trump — who endorsed the former U.S. representa­tive’s 2018 bid for governor but now views the governor as an upstart — and offers a glimpse into his origin story as a working-class baseball star from Dunedin who attended Yale and Harvard and later served in the Navy.

On Wednesday, DeSantis touted his administra­tion’s record in educationa­l freedom, economic growth and COVID-19 response. Though he initially shut down much of the state in the early days of the pandemic, he reopened Florida early and later opposed vaccine passports, mask mandates and closing down businesses.

It’s why the peninsula, he said, became known as the “free state of Florida.“

“So the lesson is boldness is your friend,” he said. “[People] are sick of these typical wishy-washy politician­s who don’t do anything in office.”

The governor pointed to policies that he advocated for, such as ending Disney’s self-governing status. He quipped about how he married his wife, Casey DeSantis, who comes from a family of Disney fanatics, at the park about 15 years ago.

“The most powerful company in the state has really run the state for 60 years until I became governor,” DeSantis said. “Now, there’s a new sheriff in town.”

His reasoning for targeting Disney — woke messaging.

“They’re going off in this direction with the young kids, to say that it’s appropriat­e to have some secondgrad­er be told by their teacher that they may have been born in the wrong body,” he said, using language that some critics say targets the transgende­r community. “They wanted to inject into programmin­g some of this stuff. I grew up watching this stuff. It’s not something that parents were worried about.”

DeSantis reiterated his administra­tion’s commitment to supporting police and removing some public officials, such as district attorneys funded by “leftwing causes.” He also mentioned plans to relieve tolls as well as taxes on baby products and over-thecounter pet medication­s.

He spoke at length about education, firing shots at teachers unions, critical race theory and what he called the “pornograph­ic” materials in public K-12 schools. He also vowed to fight universiti­es for encouragin­g an “ideologica­l worldview” and “social and political activism.”

“Do they get to do whatever they want and pose a political agenda regardless of elections?” he said. “At the end of the day, we’re saving academia from itself.”

As the speech wrapped up, the governor boasted about the book’s No. 1 ranking on Amazon. The audience cheered as he encouraged them to keep up the momentum because they’re “going to see lots of wins” this legislativ­e session, which starts Tuesday.

“When I talk about ... the courage to be free, I’m just pointing out that leadership in this day and age is not cost free,” he said. “You stand for the right things . ... They’re going to come at you. They’re going to smear you.”

 ?? JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com ?? Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis holds his book on Wednesday about 10 minutes away from Trump National Doral Miami.
JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis holds his book on Wednesday about 10 minutes away from Trump National Doral Miami.

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