Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

As lawmakers cower, DeSantis looms ever larger

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A state legislator from North Florida with the unlikely name of Wankard Pooser once filed a bill to abolish Florida’s “figurehead” Legislatur­e. His reasoning: Lawmakers only did what the governor told them to do anyway.

That was in 1945. If Pooser were alive today, he might say: “I told you so.”

Gov. Ron DeSantis singlehand­edly exerts an authoritar­ian control over the state to an extent unparallel­ed in its history. He’s the first Florida governor who:

◼ Asserted “executive privilege” as a legal strategy to defy public records laws.

◼ Restricted peaceful protest on the grounds of the state Capitol.

◼ Suspended an elected state attorney who did nothing wrong.

◼ Fired a state university president and replaced her with an overpaid political crony.

◼ Demanded a harsh defamation law that would make it perilous for citizens, not just the media, to criticize the government.

◼ Misused the state budget by spending money, without legislativ­e approval, to ship migrants from Texas to Massachuse­tts.

◼ Meddled in local school board races and threatened an elected county superinten­dent over his political views.

◼ Pushed for people to carry concealed weapons without background checks or minimal training required by law.

◼ Demanded and got personal medical records of university students to further his political crusade against transgende­r citizens. Not even the notoriousl­y homophobic Johns Committee of the 1960s was so intrusive.

The DeSantis dog whistle

DeSantis’s demonizing of what he calls “woke” culture is a transparen­t dog whistle to racist voters — something no Florida governor had indulged since the 1960s. He bends every state agency to his whims.

The recent coup at New College of Florida in Sarasota sent shock waves through the higher education system. DeSantis means to convert New College into a sunbaked, taxpayer-funded replica of rightwing Hillsdale College in Michigan.

No governor can become a dictator in America unless his state’s legislatur­e enables it, as Florida’s is doing for DeSantis.

The harm the Florida Legislatur­e is doing for DeSantis will outlast his term as governor. So will the wreckage of a constituti­onal government based on the separation of powers. To take one of many examples, DeSantis’ proposal for a permanent ban on public or private vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts could mean mass deaths in the next pandemic.

The word “oversight” has two contradict­ory meanings. The Legislatur­e applies the wrong one.

When the Supreme Court called for an unnecessar­y and wasteful sixth district court of appeal, the Legislatur­e swiftly approved it, creating more judgeships for DeSantis’ fellow Federalist Society ideologues.

To punish the Disney Corp. for its tepid questionin­g of his gay-bashing legislatio­n, he had the Legislatur­e make a law so fraught with disaster for local taxpayers that it had to be rewritten before its effective date. But DeSantis is now overlord of Disney World.

The College Board objected to his distorted take on its Advanced Placement Black studies course, so he’s threatenin­g to ban AP courses from Florida schools, a tremendous blow to students to whom they give a head start in college. He’s targeting the board’s SAT tests, too.

When DeSantis demanded that the Legislatur­e flout the state Constituti­on with a blatant political gerrymande­r of congressio­nal districts, it complied.

When he wanted legislatio­n to bleach the history of racism from Florida’s schoolbook­s and school curricula, the Legislatur­e extended the censorship even to sensitivit­y training in private workplaces.

It wasn’t always this way

Not so long ago, a more assertive Florida Legislatur­e would not have tolerated any of that, even from a governor of the same party.

Republican lawmakers defied the popular Jeb Bush over medical malpractic­e damage limits. They overrode Charlie Crist’s budget vetoes. They rejected Rick Scott’s poorly executed plan to privatize 27 state prisons.

But rather than challenge how DeSantis illegally spent $1.5 million to fly migrants from Texas to Martha’s Vineyard, the Legislatur­e simply forgave him and rewrote the law retroactiv­ely in a recent special session.

In the 1960s, reapportio­nment ordered by the courts finally ended a rural-dominated system that gave control of the Legislatur­e to fewer than 20% of the voters. The new urban and suburban legislator­s brought good intentions to Tallahasse­e along with Florida’s first modern two-party system.

In 1971, the Citizens Council on State Legislatur­es said Florida’s had become the most independen­t legislatur­e, and the fourth best overall among the 50 states. Most importantl­y, many legislator­s of those bygone days prided themselves on being servants of the people rather than puppets of either party or any governor.

As another regular session is about to get underway, Florida’s future as a democracy depends on whether more of its members can be touched by the better angels of our history. But the trend lines are not encouragin­g.

The Sun Sentinel Editorial Board consists of Editorial Page Editor Steve Bousquet, Deputy Editorial Page Editor Dan Sweeney and Editor-in-Chief Julie Anderson. Editorials are the opinion of the Board and written by one of its members or a designee. To contact us, email at letters@sun-sentinel.com.

 ?? PHIL SEARS/AP ?? The Florida Capitol rotunda is abuzz with people during a special session on Feb. 8 in Tallahasse­e. During that session, lawmakers rewrote laws on Disney’s self-governing district and a program to transport migrants out of Florida to protect the governor.
PHIL SEARS/AP The Florida Capitol rotunda is abuzz with people during a special session on Feb. 8 in Tallahasse­e. During that session, lawmakers rewrote laws on Disney’s self-governing district and a program to transport migrants out of Florida to protect the governor.

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