Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Texts reveal vaccine site was set up to help DeSantis

- By Steven Lemongello slemongell­o@orlandosen­tinel.com

The already controvers­ial Lakewood Ranch COVID-19 vaccinatio­n pod in Manatee County was carefully choreograp­hed by organizers and the governor’s office to help him win reelection next year, texts obtained by the Bradenton Herald show.

Asked about the report Tuesday, DeSantis called it “nonsense” and suggested that the “partisan” news media didn’t want people in wealthy, Republican-leaning neighborho­ods to get vaccinated.

The Lakewood “popup” site was limited to residents of two wealthy ZIP codes in Manatee County. Prominent Democrats have already called for an investigat­ion after reports showed a Manatee commission­er included herself and developer Rex Jensen on a VIP list to get shots.

The Bradenton Herald and Miami Herald report revealed texts between Commission­er Vanessa Baugh and Jensen, including an exchange on Feb. 9 in which Jensen texted Baugh, “Gov said he might show up. Should try to see if that would help him get exposure here.”

“Excellent point,” Baugh responded, pivoting to DeSantis’ reelection campaign next year. “After all, ‘22 is right around the corner.”

Jensen had just finished a call between DeSantis and another Lakewood Ranch developer, Pat Neal, the newspapers reported. Neal gave $125,000 to DeSantis’ political committee in 2018 and 2019, and two other pop-up sites in Venice and Sarasota also were set up at his developmen­ts.

An advance team from the governor’s office visited the Lakewood site, the report said.

Instead of randomly determinin­g who would get the vaccine at the DeSantis event kicking off the pod, text messages indicated the governor’s staff asked Jensen to create a list.

“Amazing. They want me to maintain a list. They can’t. Screw this,’’ Jensen wrote to Baugh on Feb. 9 after speaking to the Florida Department of Health, according to the report.

Baugh then directed the Manatee County public safety director to limit the vaccines to the two wealthy zip codes in which Lakewood was located, emails show.

Asked about the report at a press conference in Lee County, DeSantis said Manatee was targeted because it was “one of the worst counties in the state” for senior vaccinatio­ns.

“They were like 20-some percent [of seniors vaccinated],” DeSantis said. “I had some counties that were 50% just a few weeks ago. So we said, ‘Where can we go to make an impact?’ So we did a senior pod at Lakewood Ranch, which is very successful, thousands of seniors got it. … So what we did worked in Manatee, we’re not done in Manatee, but that’s what it was about.”

DeSantis said it was “a mistake to try to demonize certain seniors. I think there [are] some elements of, particular­ly, the partisan corporate media, who doesn’t want people being vaccinated who disagree with them politicall­y. That’s insane.”

The pop-up site was criticized almost immediatel­y by Manatee commission­ers and other Democrats for targeting some of the wealthiest, whitest, most Republican neighborho­ods in Manatee.

The latest controvers­y over alleged preferenti­al treatment at pop-up sites comes after the Ocean Reef Club gated community in Key Largo came under fire for getting almost all of its residents vaccinated by the third week in January, well before the rest of the state.

Seventeen Ocean Reef residents had donated $5,000 each to DeSantis’ committee as of December, and another, former Republican Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner, gave DeSantis’ campaign $250,000 in February.

DeSantis claimed last week that the state had nothing to do with the local hospital distributi­ng the vaccines there, but a Baptist Health spokespers­on said the hospital was asked by the governor’s office to go into the exclusive neighborho­od.

Democrats that include Agricultur­e Commission­er Nikki Fried and U.S. Rep. Charlie Crist, both potential DeSantis opponents in 2022, have called for a federal investigat­ion into allegation­s of favoritism.

“Politics, not science, is driving Florida’s vaccine distributi­on,” Fried said on Twitter on Tuesday. “This is an abominatio­n and a failure to all Floridians — @GovRonDeSa­ntis must answer for this corruption.”

 ?? CHRIS O’MEARA/AP ?? Gov. Ron DeSantis gestures as he speaks at a coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n site Feb. 17 in Bradenton.
CHRIS O’MEARA/AP Gov. Ron DeSantis gestures as he speaks at a coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n site Feb. 17 in Bradenton.

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