Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

DeSantis reset not enough for Florida

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Gov. Ron DeSantis, it turns out, is no political genius. Credited for his ability to sniff out conservati­ve cultural grievances like no politician since Donald Trump, DeSantis became known for fighting drag queens, critical race theory and Disney. Buoyed by a landslide reelection last year, and his sense of self-importance, DeSantis based his presidenti­al campaign in great part on his approach to the pandemic and being a culture warrior.

His polling numbers have sagged — they are worse than they were before he entered the GOP primary. His campaign has burned through cash and recently laid off 38 employees. National media that, after last year’s midterms crowned DeSantis Trump’s heir apparent, discuss his lack of charisma these days.

DeSantis has hit the reset button, shifting his focus to economic issues, as the Herald reported this week. He’s still rallying against what he describes as “woke,” but he’s poised to show his populist and sympatheti­c side. On Monday, he announced a set of conservati­ve run-of-the-mill economic proposals, vowed to cut spending and even talked about the country’s wealth gap and college debt. He told reporters he would not answer questions on “anything that’s not about the economy.”

While some may welcome his sharpened attention to pocketbook concerns, we know better.

Even if DeSantis magically transforms into Ronald Reagan, the damage he’s done has been enshrined into every facet of Florida law and policy.

He has censored what teachers can say in classrooms about LGBTQ+ Americans and race. He’s railed against educators trying to “indoctrina­te” kids while doing his own brainwashi­ng. The Florida Department of Education has allowed schools to use teaching materials for children created by nonprofit PragerU. Founder and conservati­ve radio host Dennis Prager has been blunt about the mission of PragerU Kids, the Herald reported.

“It’s true we bring doctrines to children,” Prager said at a conference for the conservati­ve group Moms for Liberty in Philadelph­ia. “But what is the bad about our indoctrina­tion?”

Thanks to DeSantis, your kids may now be exposed to a cartoon video by PragerU Kids in which Christophe­r Columbus tells children that slavery was “no big deal” in his time, and that “being taken as a slave is better than being killed.” Or a video narrated by African-American social media conservati­ve personalit­y Candace Owens that absolves white people from blame for the sins of slavery — “slavery was not invented by white people,” she says.

Your child cannot receive gender-affirming care if they are transgende­r, even when recommende­d by a doctor. They can’t use the bathroom that aligns with their identity in government buildings. Your teenager cannot attend a drag queen show, not even with your supervisio­n or consent. And your kid’s school teacher may lose their job if they teach Black history in a way that makes white parents feel their children are being blamed for racism. If they mention that LGBTQ+ people exist, they may get in trouble, thanks to Florida’s vague parental rights law known as “Don’t say gay.”

The Legislatur­e in the past two years has been hard at work to make sure DeSantis had enough culture-war victories to brag about. It’s early, and DeSantis can still close in on Donald Trump, who has a huge lead in the primary polls, but, so far, fighting windmills might not be paying off for him.

Primary voters either care more about real issues or their support for Trump is too strong to waver for any other candidate. Regardless, by shifting his strategy DeSantis has recognized cultural grievances only go so far.

In Florida, unfortunat­ely, they’ve gone too far.

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