Orlando Sentinel

Will the real Ron DeSantis please stand up?

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Smiling and relaxed, Gov. Ron DeSantis made a serious effort to present a warmer and more reasonable likeness of himself in his State of the State address Tuesday. Floridians know better.

It was clear from the outset that DeSantis aimed this high-profile appearance, on the opening day of the 2023 legislativ­e session, at people far from our shores. Much of this speech was not about Florida. After DeSantis won reelection with an astounding 59% of the vote, this state is either solidly in his corner or a hopelessly lost cause. It depends on your perspectiv­e.

As DeSantis faced a packed House chamber in the state Capitol, this White House wannabe’s target audience wasn’t those of us who must live under his repressive regime. It was the guy watching from a diner in Des Moines, who will eventually have to choose between DeSantis and Donald Trump.

So the speech had no scorched-earth rhetoric about the “corporate legacy media” and no references to Florida as “where woke goes to die.” He barely mentioned abortion, the most divisive political issue of all, even though the news broke mid-speech that his Republican allies will push for a six-week ban on abortions in Florida with a 15-week ban still under court challenge.

‘A war they will get’

Democrats seemed to welcome a new fight over abortion rights.

“This is it. They have come. And if it’s a war they want, it’s a war they will get,” said Sen. Lauren Book, D-Davie, the leader of the 12-member Senate Democratic Caucus. “This issue bridges the partisan divide, and we will not go down as easily as they believe.”

DeSantis’ talk to a compliant Legislatur­e was repeatedly punctuated by enthusiast­ic applause from the Republican super-majority. He seemed intent on recasting his most controvers­ial stances, such as rejecting science-based leadership on COVID, as undeniable successes. He kept the spotlight on himself, in a speech with repeated bursts of braggadoci­o (“Florida is the fastest growing state in the nation”). It was a clear attempt to redefine his image as a forward-thinking maverick, not a hotheaded extremist.

Floridians who have studied him for years know differentl­y. They knew what DeSantis was leaving out. He ignored the plight of hundreds of thousands of Florida residents whose access to affordable health insurance is almost completely blocked. He used the focus-group tested word “freedom” repeatedly, even as he referenced initiative­s that would strip Floridians of fundamenta­l liberties, including academic freedom, business decision-making and bodily autonomy.

For the Floridians who lack health insurance and the million-plus vulnerable low-income people facing the loss of Medicaid coverage in a few weeks, DeSantis did not offer one word of hope. In this administra­tion, they don’t matter.

What safeguards?

Other Floridians only matter as human fuel for his grand plans.

He wants parents to have the “freedom” to choose vouchers for private schools. But where are the safeguards for those students, or assurances that his proposals won’t drain local school boards of the money they need? He wants Floridians to have the right to obtain and carry weapons pretty much anywhere. But where are the protection­s for families and communitie­s torn apart by gun violence?

Instead, DeSantis wanted everyone to know he’s busy building bridges.

He won sustained applause from lawmakers when he described how Florida repaired a key bridge in the wake of Hurricane Ian in just three days, and another in two weeks.

His “be bold” message to lawmakers offered room for bridge-building agreements with the hopelessly outnumbere­d Democrats.

Who would oppose permanent tax breaks on baby supplies? Or relief from the high cost of toll roads? Or better salaries for teachers? Or billions for long-delayed road projects?

Bridges are for burning

After four-plus years of life under DeSantis, the record is clear: Bridges are mostly for burning.

He trotted out the usual villains: plaintiffs’ attorneys, the Chinese, immigrants, gender-affirming treatment. So were the usual victims: people robbed of the ability to pocket a handgun when they go grocery shopping, health care workers who wanted to defy vaccine requiremen­ts at the expense of their own patients.

The desperate need for affordable housing merited a passing mention, but sky-high property insurance premiums that threaten to drive people from their homes was ignored.

Coastline protection got a self-congratula­tory pat on the back. But a state fund to repair and remove South Florida septic systems failing because of sea level rise is empty.

Abortion will soon take center stage. The six-week abortion ban (SB 300) includes exceptions for rape and incest that the 15-week ban lacks. But it would still push Florida into the ranks of 14 states with the most extreme anti-abortion laws in the country.

It would circumvent a privacy clause in the state constituti­on that up to now has held abortion to be a constituti­onal right. It also will generate enormous national media coverage. It would burnish an oval office resume. It would ignore the stated wishes of millions of Florida voters. It would torch discussion with moderates.

It is extremism, piously packaged as morally-based moderation. In other words, it’s pure, unadultera­ted Ron DeSantis — the reality Floridians know.

The Orlando Sentinel Editorial Board includes Editor-in-Chief Julie Anderson, Opinion Page Editor Krys Fluker and Viewpoints Editor Jay Reddick. The Sun Sentinel Editorial Board consists of Editorial Page Editor Steve Bousquet, Deputy Editorial Page Editor Dan Sweeney, and Anderson. Send letters to insight@orlandosen­tinel. com.

 ?? PHIL SEARS/AP ?? Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis smiles as he finishes his State of the State address during a joint session of the Senate and House of Representa­tives on Tuesday at the Capitol in Tallahasse­e.
PHIL SEARS/AP Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis smiles as he finishes his State of the State address during a joint session of the Senate and House of Representa­tives on Tuesday at the Capitol in Tallahasse­e.

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