The Guardian (USA)

Biden: Republican­s’ Disney law shows ‘far right has taken over party’

- Richard Luscombe in Miami

For Joe Biden, the vote by Florida Republican­s on Thursday to strip Disney of its self-governing powers was a step too far.

“Christ, they’re going after Mickey Mouse,” the president exclaimed at a fundraiser in Oregon, in apparent disbelief that state governor Ron DeSantis’s culture wars had reached the gates of the Magic Kingdom.

The move, Biden asserted, reflected his belief that the “far right has taken over the party”.

By voting to penalize Florida’s largest private employer, lawmakers followed DeSantis’s wishes in securing revenge on a company he brands as “woke” for its opposition to his “don’t say gay” law.

DeSantis is a likely candidate for the Republican presidenti­al nomination in 2024. He has pushed his legislatur­e on several rightwing laws in recent weeks, including a 15-week abortion ban, stripping Black voters of congressio­nal representa­tion and preventing discussion of sexual orientatio­n and gender identity issues in schools.

On Friday, the governor signed the anti-Disney law as well as a measure banning critical race theory in schools and the controvers­ial new electoral map. Voting rights groups including the League of Women Voters of Florida, the Black Voters Matter Capacity Building Institute and the Equal Ground Education Fund filed suit against the new electoral map, in state court in Tallahasse­e.

“This is not your father’s Republican party,” Biden said at the fundraiser in Oregon.

“It’s not even conservati­ve in a traditiona­l sense of conservati­sm. It’s mean, it’s ugly. Look at what’s happening in Florida: Christ, they’re going after Mickey Mouse.”

Analysts are still grappling with the likely effects of the Disney law, which will disband an entity officially known as the Reedy Creek improvemen­t district. The body, which was approved by Florida legislator­s in 1967, gives Disney autonomous powers, including generating its own tax revenue and selfgovern­ance as it built its hugely popular theme parks.

Ending the 55-year agreement, Democrats says, will leave local residents on the hook for the functions Reedy Creek was responsibl­e for paying for, including police and fire services, and road constructi­on and maintenanc­e.

The state senator Gary Farmer, a vocal opponent of DeSantis, said families in Orange and Osceola counties that straddle the 25,000-acre Disney World resort could each face property tax raises of $2,200 annually to cover the shortfall. His claim is so far unsubstant­iated.

Republican­s have been unable to point to any financial advantage to the state, and appear to be relying instead on the political argument that the concept of the “special taxing district” was outdated and in need of reform.

“Aside from maybe taking away the company’s ability to build a nuclear plant, we have yet to hear how this benefits Florida, and especially the local residents in any way,” Nick Papantonis, a reporter who covers Disney for

Orlando’s WFTV, said in a Twitter analysis.

“The residents, by the way, had no say in this vote, no say in their property taxes going through the roof, and no desire to have their communitie­s staring at financial ruin.”

If in practice DeSantis’s goal is to punish Disney, some say the move could backfire, at least financiall­y. Reedy Creek’s abolition on 1 June next year would give it an immediate tax break. The $163m it taxes itself annually to pay for service and pay off debt becomes the responsibi­lity of the county taxpayers.

“The moment that Reedy Creek doesn’t exist is the moment that those taxes don’t exist,” the Orange county tax collector Scott Randolph, a Democrat, told WFTV. “[And] Orange county can’t just slap a new taxing district on to that area and recoup the money that was lost.”

Most of Disney’s estimated 77,000 cast members, as its workers are known, live in those two counties, so would effectivel­y end up paying their employer’s taxes as well as their own, critics say.

Disney has remained silent, its most recent comment on the entire affair being the hard-hitting statement that upset DeSantis in the first place. The company, which has a notably diverse cast, promised to work to overturn the “don’t say gay” law, and added it was halting all political donations.

Disney contribute­d almost $1m to the Republican party of Florida in 2020, and $50,000 directly to DeSantis, records show.

Whatever it decides to do, Disney has options. In a probably tonguein-cheek offer, the Colorado governor, Jared Polis, is offering “asylum” to Mickey Mouse in his state. But he was critical of DeSantis’s stance.

“Florida’s authoritar­ian socialist attacks on the private sector are driving businesses away. In CO, we don’t meddle in affairs of companies like Disney or Twitter. Hey @Disney we’re ready for Mountain Disneyland,” he said in a tweet.

Legal challenges are expected once DeSantis signs the Reedy Creek abolition into law, and Republican­s point out they could revisit the issue next year before it takes effect.

Democrats are dismissive: “Let’s call this what it is, it’s the punitive, petulant political payback to a corporatio­n who dared to say the emperor has no clothes, but if they behave this way next election cycle, maybe we’ll put it back together,” Farmer, the state senator, said.

Some political analysts, meanwhile, believe DeSantis is walking a tightrope.

“The base is demanding of the Republican party these culture war elements, at least that’s what these politician­s are thinking, so they’re using these attacks on ‘woke’ corporatio­ns as a way of energizing their base so they can win in 2022 and 2024,” Charles Zelden, professor of humanities and politics at Nova Southeaste­rn University and a longtime Florida Disney watcher, told the Guardian.

“The downside is it’s bringing them into conflict with corporatio­ns they had a very comfortabl­e relationsh­ip with for a lot of years, who have donated a lot of money to their campaigns.”

 ?? Photograph: Octavio Jones/Reuters ?? Supporters of Florida's Republican-backed ‘don't say gay’ bill gather outside Walt Disney World in Orlando, on 16 April.
Photograph: Octavio Jones/Reuters Supporters of Florida's Republican-backed ‘don't say gay’ bill gather outside Walt Disney World in Orlando, on 16 April.

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