Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

DeSantis likes democracy that operates in the dark

- Nikki Fried, a Democrat, is Florida’s Commission­er of Agricultur­e and Consumer Services, and is an independen­tly-elected member of the Florida Cabinet.

Florida is one of the nation’s most unique states, for a wide variety of reasons. One of those is how we’re governed. We’re the only state with a Cabinet that constituti­onally governs together over numerous state agencies.

The four officials on this bipartisan Cabinet each earned more than 4 million votes from Floridians. Together, we jointly oversee the state’s revenue, law enforcemen­t, land acquisitio­n, and restoratio­n of voting and civil rights, among several other important responsibi­lities.

At all times, and particular­ly during a pandemic, Floridians expect their state leaders to govern together. But we can’t do that without all the facts.

Since we took office in 2019, there has been a tendency by Gov. Ron DeSantis to leave the Cabinet — and Floridians — in the dark. And since the COVID-19 outbreak, that tendency has become a disturbing pattern of deception and withholdin­g critical informatio­n.

Time after time, we’ve seen the Governor’s office and his agencies refuse to answer questions or release cases, data, and other public informatio­n, until forced to by the media or public pressure.

Were it just one incident, it might be understand­able. Government at every level is under pressure to help the citizens we serve during this crisis. But it’s been one issue after another on which this Governor has lacked transparen­cy. The instances are as staggering as they are reckless.

First, this administra­tion refused to release cases and deaths that stemmed from nursing homes. They also refused to name the facilities where COVID-19 was present, leaving the families of nursing home residents rightfully fearful for their loved ones. Only after pressure from outraged Floridians and threats of media lawsuits did they finally release this informatio­n.

Then, the same pattern emerged with prison data. The Department of Correction­s kept inmate deaths from COVID-19 a secret for nearly a week, and refused to acknowledg­e the number of cases. Only until the media discovered deaths through medical examiners did they finally acquiesce to releasing informatio­n.

Then they came for the medical examiners.

In a stunning assault on transparen­cy, medical examiners were told by the DeSantis administra­tion not to release data on COVID-19 deaths, even though for nearly three decades they’ve been responsibl­e for reporting deaths from natural disasters and diseases. This created disparitie­s in the data on deaths of our residents and visitors that is simply inexcusabl­e during a public health crisis — or at any other time.

Finally, we’ve now seen the forced resignatio­n of a data scientist who claims she refused to “‘manually change data to drum up support for the plan to reopen’ the state.” Since then, we’ve all borne witness to the ugliest smear campaign in recent memory, against a state employee — an imperfect person, as are we all — personally orchestrat­ed by the Governor’s office.

To date, Floridians have no explanatio­n regarding the data she was ordered to remove — and it doesn’t look like we’ll ever get one. Meanwhile, our duly-elected Cabinet hadn’t met for nearly four months until this week, and remains publicly uninformed on the data, informatio­n, and processes that have shaped our state’s response to COVID-19.

I’ve asked for regular Cabinet briefings on COVID-19 since March 2. I formally requested them on April 9. I’ve called the Governor personally to ask for updates. I’ve offered to share what we’re doing to support agricultur­e, currently the state’s largest economic driver. When excluded from the Governor’s re-opening task force, I sent him a 10-page plan with 15 key recommenda­tions for our $137 billion agricultur­e industry. All of this was ignored by DeSantis.

It’s hard to trust a Governor that consistent­ly fights not only the release of public records, but the obligation to govern alongside his fellow elected Cabinet members. It’s even harder when so much is at stake, and when the records are a matter of life and death.

We’ve all not faced anything close to this pandemic in our lifetimes. Mistakes will be made. But what’s happening now isn’t a mistake – it’s a deliberate attempt to hide informatio­n and silence critics.

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By Nikki Fried

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