USA TODAY US Edition

Florida, Michigan show what the right and left really stand for

- Rex Huppke USA TODAY Follow USA TODAY columnist Rex Huppke on X, formerly Twitter, @RexHuppke and Facebook facebook.com/RexIsAJerk

As Americans march toward the 2024 presidenti­al election and into a dust cloud of news and punditry, let’s think more broadly about what matters most: priorities.

What do our two main political parties value? What issues are they focused on, and how do those issues align with each individual voter’s view of how the world should be?

By looking at Democrat-led states and Republican-led states, the difference­s couldn’t be more stark, like contrastin­g open arms with a barbed-wire fence.

DeSantis and Whitmer reflect difference­s in right and left

Consider this, from an NBC News report in March previewing the 2023 legislativ­e session overseen by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and his Republican-controlled legislatur­e: “Expect a number of bills that will be red meat for the majority’s Republican base. Among them are major proposals to expand gun rights, further restrict diversity efforts at public universiti­es and expand the ability to sue media outlets for defamation.”

And then this, from an Associated Press story in August discussing the issues Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer is directing her Democratic­led legislatur­e to take on in the remainder of this year: “Paid family and medical leave, a 100% clean energy standard and codifying protection­s ensured by the Affordable Care Act.”

How about a headline from 2021: “Fla. becomes latest state to enact restrictiv­e voting law as DeSantis signs bill on Fox News.”

And this one from July: “Michigan governor signs legislatio­n expanding voting rights.”

Two states are laboratori­es for Republican, Democratic priorities

In each state, one party has the governor’s office and a legislativ­e majority. And in each state, the priorities reflect radically different world views, giving voters nationwide two-partyspeci­fic laboratori­es to look at and ask: Which world do I want to live in?

DeSantis’ GOP presidenti­al primary run has put a spotlight on Florida, the state he proudly trumpets as “where woke goes to die.”

DeSantis’ Florida bans abortion, opens up gun access, bans DEI

Here are some of his key accomplish­ments, reflecting the MAGA-centric priorities he has embraced: A six-week abortion ban.

A law allowing Floridians to carry a concealed weapon without a permit.

A law banning transgende­r girls from playing on girls’ sports teams in high school. DeSantis signed the bill at a private Christian school and said: “In Florida, girls are going to play girls sports and boys are going to play boys sports.” According to the Orlando Sentinel, since 2013, only 11 transgende­r children have tried to play high school sports in Florida, and only two were transgende­r girls.

A law defunding diversity, equity and inclusion programs at state colleges and universiti­es.

A ban on teaching the College Board’s Advanced Placement African American Studies course in public schools.

A law prohibitin­g classroom instructio­n on sexual orientatio­n and gender identity in all grades.

A $10 million budget allotment that allows the state to round up migrants and fly or bus them to any other part of the country.

Mich. tightens gun laws, codifies abortion rights, protects LGBTQ+

And here are some of Whitmer’s accomplish­ments in Michigan:

A law requiring universal background checks on gun purchases and safe-storage requiremen­ts for firearms owners.

Expanded absentee and early voting rights, including requiring at least one secure absentee ballot drop box in each Michigan municipali­ty.

A law expanding a Michigan civil rights act to include legal protection­s that cover sexual orientatio­n and gender identity.

Support for the eventually successful ballot measure enshrining abortion rights into the state constituti­on followed by an executive order instructin­g state officials to “ensure that reproducti­ve freedom is secured to all Michigande­rs.”

A law expanding the state’s earned income tax credit, which helps lowerincom­e earners, from 6% of the federal credit to 30%, boosting the average savings from $150 to more than $700.

Made Michigan the seventh state to provide free breakfast and lunch to all public school students.

Launched the “MI Healthy Climate” plan to address environmen­tal issues, requiring Michigan to switch to fully carbon-free energy sources by 2035 and do away with coal-fired power plants by 2030.

Don’t listen to what a party says, watch what its lawmakers do

There are, of course, myriad other issues these two governors have tackled, and there are endless ways – from weather to activities to tax structures to employment opportunit­ies – one can parse which state any individual would find preferable.

But these things each governor presents as accomplish­ments reflect many of the priorities of each political party. And I daresay the difference­s matter.

You have one side sharply restrictin­g abortion access and voting rights, expanding gun access and denouncing diversity, equity and inclusion vs. another side expanding abortion access and voting rights, tightening gun control and embracing diversity while expanding the legal rights of marginaliz­ed groups.

As election season begins, ask: What kind of world do I want?

And these difference­s are evident in other states as well. Gov. Greg Abbott in Republican-controlled Texas is laying dangerous buoys and concertina wire along the Rio Grande to deter migrants. Democratic Gov. Tim Walz in Minnesota signed a law this year allowing migrants to get driver’s licenses regardless of their immigratio­n status, making it easier for them to work.

Where you fall on these priorities is your business. I want a society that respects diversity, recognizes gun violence as the epidemic it is, gives women the reproducti­ve freedom they had until the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, and finds ways to welcome and help people rather than pushing them away. I believe that a majority of Americans feel the same way. For all our faults, we tend to bend toward decency and compassion, and when comparing the two sides, it’s not really a competitio­n. Younger voters in particular aren’t about to pick a Florida over a Michigan, a fact that Republican­s won’t be able to outrun.

So as we head into the dust cloud of a critical presidenti­al election, it’s worth your time to get a clear look at the priorities each party embraces through its actions in states across the country.

Talk is cheap, and there will be plenty of it. But it’s the actions we need to pay attention to when considerin­g the kind of country we hope to be.

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