Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

DeSantis summons legislator­s over mandates

- ANTHONY IZAGUIRRE

TALLAHASSE­E, Fla. — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said Thursday he will call state lawmakers back to work early to pass legislatio­n to combat coronaviru­s vaccine mandates enacted by businesses.

The Republican governor said he will convene a special session of the GOP-controlled statehouse in November to address vaccine requiremen­ts. He didn’t specify a starting date.

“At the end of the day, you shouldn’t be discrimina­ted against based on your health decisions,” he said during a news conference. “We want to provide protection for people, we want to make it clear that, in Florida, your right to earn a living is not contingent upon whatever choices you’re making in terms of these injections.”

Many other states are considerin­g anti- mandate bills. GOP Texas Gov. Greg Abbott last week issued an executive order to prohibit any entity from requiring vaccines.

In broad terms, DeSantis outlined policy goals for the special session, including holding businesses liable for adverse reactions to vaccines, removing legal liability protection­s for employers with vaccine mandates and added protection­s for people fired for not being vaccinated. DeSantis has for weeks criticized White House plans to require vaccinatio­ns and vowed to fight such rules in court. His administra­tion has also fined local school boards who defied a state ban on mask mandates in classrooms and has moved to withhold funding from districts that receive federal grants meant to blunt the state’s fines.

The announceme­nt appeared to catch at least one legislativ­e leader off-guard. Shortly after the governor’s news conference, Republican Florida House Speaker Chris Sprowls told lawmakers that his office had no additional details about the session.

Democrats were quick to criticize the governor’s plan.

“He’s behaving like the dictators that supposedly we all hate,” said state Sen. Annette Taddeo, who this week announced she is running for governor. “Why are we telling private businesses what they can and cannot do?”

 ?? (AP/Marta Lavandier) ?? “At the end of the day, you shouldn’t be discrimina­ted against based on your health decisions,” Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, shown at an event in August, asserted Thursday.
(AP/Marta Lavandier) “At the end of the day, you shouldn’t be discrimina­ted against based on your health decisions,” Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, shown at an event in August, asserted Thursday.

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