Orlando Sentinel

The two leading

- By Lloyd Dunkelberg­er

Republican candidates for governor — Agricultur­e Commission­er Adam Putnam and U.S. Rep. Ron DeSantis — talk abortion and guns to the Florida Family Policy Council, a group that favors guns and opposes women’s reproducti­ve rights.

In their first joint appearance of the campaign, the two leading Republican candidates for governor Saturday night outlined a series of conservati­ve stances on abortion, gun rights and other issues.

There were few difference­s between Agricultur­e Commission­er Adam Putnam and U.S. Rep. Ron DeSantis, who each took questions in separate halfhour sessions in Orlando before the Florida Family Policy Council, a conservati­ve advocacy group that opposes abortion and gay marriage.

Both candidates oppose abortion, with Putnam telling the council members that he would support a “heartbeat bill,” which would prohibit doctors from performing abortions if a fetal heartbeat can be detected. Iowa’s Republican governor signed such a bill Friday, setting up a legal fight that supporters hope could lead to a test of the U.S. Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade decision.

“If the heartbeat bill gets to my desk, I will sign it,” Putnam said, recounting listening to the heartbeat of one of his four children before birth. “That life is real. It should be protected. It should be defended.”

The Florida Democratic Party issued a statement late Saturday that blasted Putnam on the abortion issue, describing him as an “anti-choice extremist.”

“Instead of laying out a positive vision to move Florida forward, Putnam is putting forward an extreme, far right agenda that would hurt women’s health and undermine working families,” Democratic Party spokesman Kevin Donohoe said.

DeSantis, a three-term congressma­n from Palm Coast, was not asked directly about abortion legislatio­n, but he is a co-sponsor of a bill that would provide protection­s for fetuses “born alive” during abortion procedures. He recounted seeing an ultrasound of his son, who was born this year, calling it “a powerful example of science reinforcin­g something that I believe.”

Putnam and DeSantis are expected to face each other in the Aug. 28 Republican primary for governor. House Speaker Richard Corcoran, R-Land O’Lakes, is also considerin­g the race, although he has not announced his decision.

“Our party would be in a pretty bad place if there were broad disagreeme­nts in front of the Florida Family Policy Council,” said Putnam, a two-term member of the state Cabinet and a former congressma­n and state lawmaker.

Issues addressed during Saturday night’s event could be important as the GOP candidates try to appeal to conservati­ve primary voters.

Asked about the state’s response to the mass shooting at Broward County’s Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, DeSantis said he would have approached a school-safety bill, which included new restrictio­ns on gun sales, “differentl­y because I think it scapegoate­d law-abiding citizens in terms of their Second Amendment rights.”

DeSantis said the system failed at the local and federal levels to protect the 17 students and staff killed and wounded in the Valentine’s Day shooting.

If he were governor, DeSantis

said he would have removed the Broward County sheriff, and he said FBI members who received two calls about the alleged shooter prior to the incident and “didn’t do anything” should be fired.

“They have not been fired. How do you have no accountabi­lity and expect to get good results?” he said.

The bill, which the Republican­dominated Legislatur­e and GOP Gov. Rick Scott approved, includes increasing the minimum age for buying rifles and other long guns to 21. The National Rifle Associatio­n has filed a federal lawsuit challengin­g that restrictio­n.

Although giving credit to Scott and lawmakers for “quickly moving” on the school tragedy, Putnam questioned how a 20-year-old could get sent on an overseas military operation “but can’t go to a sporting goods store and buy a shotgun.”

Both DeSantis and Putnam said the state needs to do more to keep weapons away from people with mental illnesses and to improve the security of school campuses.

Both candidates were asked by Frank Luntz, a Fox News analyst who moderated the event, about legislativ­e battles over the public bathrooms that can be used by transgende­r people. The issue centers on whether transgende­r people should be required to use bathrooms that correspond to their sex at birth or whether they can use bathrooms that correspond with their gender identity.

“As a father, I am not going to sign a bill that lets men into my daughters’ restrooms,” said Putnam, the father of three daughters.

DeSantis said he would oppose efforts to have “unmarked” bathrooms.

“That’s a totally inappropri­ate use of government to do that,” he said. “Getting into the bathroom wars, I don’t think that is a good use of our time.”

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