Miami Herald

DeSantis’ newly created Florida State Guard heads to Texas amid border fight with Biden

- BY ANA CEBALLOS AND LAWRENCE MOWER aceballos@miamiheral­d.com lmower@tampabay.com Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau

TALLAHASSE­E

Gov. Ron DeSantis on Thursday announced he is sending members of the Florida State Guard, a civilian military force under his control, and other state resources to the U.S.-Mexico border to help

Texas stop what he called an “invasion.”

The deployment comes as Texas is in a standoff with the Biden administra­tion over efforts to keep migrants from crossing into the state with a concertina­wire barrier. In January, the Supreme Court sided with the Biden administra­tion and said federal officials would be allowed to tear down state-erected barriers, which Texas officials have vowed to continue building if taken down.

“The goal is to help Texas fortify this border, help them strengthen the barricades, help them add barriers, help them add the wire that they need so that we can stop this invasion once and for all,” DeSantis said at a press conference in Jacksonvil­le.

DeSantis’ decision to send Florida personnel at taxpayers’ expense to secure the border in Texas is a continuati­on of the governor’s years-long efforts to position himself as a chief rival to President Joe Biden’s immigratio­n policies.

Since 2021, DeSantis has spent more than $15 million on immigratio­nrelated efforts that he says have helped stop migrants crossing Florida’s maritime border in the Florida Keys and helping Texas officers enforce the southern border. Those efforts, and his promises to use “deadly force” against suspected drug trafficker­s, were a key part of his failed presidenti­al campaign as he tried to appeal to conservati­ve voters.

“If Republican governors support sending more resources to the border they should be calling on their Senators and Representa­tives to join the Administra­tion in working to get a bipartisan agreement that delivers meaningful policy changes and addi

tional resources to the border,” a White House official said.

Now that he is no longer a presidenti­al candidate, DeSantis is renewing his focus on the issue by again flexing his executive power.

DeSantis said the border issue is “at an inflection point about whether we’re going to be a country anymore or not.” The comment mirrors the type of rhetoric that other conservati­ves have embraced. Former President Donald Trump said last year that immigrants were “poisoning the blood” of America.

The decision was quickly condemned by state House Minority Leader Fentrice Driskell, D-Tampa, who said it was a “desperate” attempt by the governor to get national attention.

“The men and women of the State Guard, and certainly the National Guard, did not sign up to be used as political stunts,” she said. “And that’s clearly what this is.”

WHAT DESANTIS IS DOING IN TEXAS

DeSantis said State Guard members would be deployed to Texas alongside members of the Florida National Guard and Florida Highway Patrol troopers, who in recent years have taken part in Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s border-security initiative­s.

It is unclear how many members will be sent, or for how long, but at the press conference there were roughly 50 members standing by the governor as he made the announceme­nt.

DeSantis said they would be sent to Texas “shortly” under the Emergency Management Assistance Compact, a mutual-aid partnershi­p among all states.

Under that agreement, Texas can give Florida state law-enforcemen­t officers and guardsmen “the same arrest and law enforcemen­t powers, right, and privileges while operating within the state limits of Texas as ordinarily afforded to law enforcemen­t forces for the State of Texas,” according to past mutual-aid agreements that DeSantis has signed with Texas about border security.

In the past, Florida officers have operated in locations that included the Rio Grande Valley sector. That area is where Texas erected razor wire and installed buoys to discourage migrants from crossing into the U.S.

In January, the Supreme Court ruled that federal officials would be allowed to remove the wire barriers. The ruling did not include any reasoning. Texas continues to say the wire barriers are needed as a result of the federal government not doing enough to apprehend migrants.

“Texas has a right to erect barriers,” DeSantis said on Thursday. “We are going to assist them in doing that.”

WHY IT MATTERS THAT FLORIDA’S STATE GUARD IS GOING

The deployment will mark the first time that members of the Florida State Guard have been activated to do work outside of the state.

The volunteer force, which was revived by DeSantis in 2022 to respond to emergencie­s in the state, so far has been activated to respond to natural disasters. DeSantis’ office indicated in the past year he also intends to use the State Guard to help “law enforcemen­t with riots and illegal immigratio­n.”

At the press conference, DeSantis was flanked by dozens of members of the Florida State Guard, Florida National Guard and Florida Highway Patrol. A private jet registered to a private company was parked behind them and a podium that read: “Stop the invasion.”

“We at the Florida State Guard are postured to deliver rapid response to any and all threats to public safety wherever and whenever need arises,” said Mark Thieme, the director of the Florida State Guard, at the press conference.

Since DeSantis first proposed reviving the World War II-era force, its size and scope have changed dramatical­ly.

It was originally sold as a 200-member group of volunteers who would pass out water bottles and other supplies after emergencie­s in Florida. But DeSantis’ administra­tion urged lawmakers to grow it to 400 members, then 1,500.

Instead of volunteers in polo shirts and khakis, State Guard members now wear camouflage­d uniforms and are referred to as “soldiers.” Last year, lawmakers approved allowing the governor to send them to out-of-state emergencie­s and assigned more than $100 million to buy planes and boats.

In the fall, State Guard leadership sent some members to a combat-training facility, where they learned how to use rifles and pistols, treat “massive hemorrhage­s” and practice “aerial gunnery.” It is unclear whether members of that specialize­d unit will be sent to Texas.

GROWING THE STATE GUARD’S MISSION

The expansion has come with growing pains. It has had three directors in 18 months, and only graduated about 120 members during a single month-long training class in June last year.

During that training, military veterans who volunteere­d for the State Guard quit over its militia-like training. One retired Marine Corps captain called local police after he said he was roughed-up by a Florida National Guard trainer.

This year, Republican lawmakers are advancing legislatio­n that would allow the State Guard to be activated during a “period of civil unrest, or any other time deemed necessary and appropriat­e.”

Some Democrats have balked at the expansion.

“We’re basically making this much more than I think was ever explained to the Legislatur­e,” Rep. Dan Daley, D-Coral Springs, said last week. “It’s just a year after year creep.”

Republican lawmakers appear to be balking at assigning more money for the State Guard, however.

Although DeSantis has asked for 39 positions and a $41 million budget for the unit, the Senate’s proposed budget released this week has no money for the State Guard.

“I think the Senate’s position is that we have a lot of unspent money,” Sen. Doug Broxson, RGulf Breeze, said this week.

The House’s proposed budget would pay for 11 full-time positions — same as last year — and only $63,000 in expenses.

 ?? ?? Gov. Ron DeSantis
Gov. Ron DeSantis
 ?? BOB SELF Florida Times-Union/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks in Jacksonvil­le on Thursday. DeSantis said the border issue is ‘at an inflection point about whether we’re going to be a country anymore.’
BOB SELF Florida Times-Union/USA TODAY NETWORK Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks in Jacksonvil­le on Thursday. DeSantis said the border issue is ‘at an inflection point about whether we’re going to be a country anymore.’

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