Las Vegas Review-Journal

Desantis’ Republican Party pushing for a one-party state

Fabiola Santiago

- Fabiola Santiago is a columnist for the Miami Herald.

Now, I can truly affirm that I have seen it all in Gov. Ron Desantis’ Florida. The state’s Republican Party is no longer a fan of multiparty American democracy — and they feel no shame in saying so in public. Nor in proposing legislatio­n to dismantle it.

When the Florida GOP’S tweet appeared on my Twitter news feed, I thought it was a joke or a parody. But what Republican­s are up to this legislativ­e season is no laughing matter.

After easily winning the gubernator­ial election and obtaining a Republican supermajor­ity in the Legislatur­e that allows the party to act unimpeded, GOP chairman Chris Ziegler says he’ll take nothing less than eradicatin­g the Democratic Party. His threat to give Democrats no seat at all at the table is very real.

Republican­s are acting like the hemisphere’s evil regimes. They know it, but don’t care.

“Until we get every Democrat out of office and no Democrat considers running for office, we’re going to continue to step on the gas and move forward in Florida,” Ziegler said Saturday in a tweet containing a television interview in which he says the same thing.

The U.S. Constituti­on and the system of checks and balances be damned. There was immediate pushback on Twitter.

A person identifyin­g as @k_kojei answered Ziegler: “I disagree. We need dissenting voices. That’s what a democracy is about. The problem is not helped by a one-sided view of things. Polarizati­on is just that, no matter who does it! There has to be dialog and balance or we remain only half represente­d!”

Ziegler doubled down.

“We are doing just fine not giving Democrats a seat at the table in Florida,” he said, mimicking what the planet’s dictators, who think countries are their personal fiefdoms, say about the opposition.

“I recommend other states to do the same!”

More people entered the conversati­on, at first, remarkably civil in tone, given the sewer speech Twitter attracts.

Some of the horrified were Republican.

“That is extreme and Totalitari­an by definition. Not a good look!” tweeted a man who describes himself as a “patriot” with “a recently restored account after two years. Starting from scratch. Unapologet­ically Conservati­ve American!! #MAGA”

“No, it’s DEMOCRACY!” retorted Ziegler, the kind of Florida man who lives in an alternate universe, and so dumb — or sure of his party’s power — that he accuses the Republican­s who disagree with him of being “leftist.”

Finally, a ‘fighting for our republic” Floridian from the Treasure Coast brought a fitting hashtag to the conversati­on — #Floridawhe­refreedomd­ies. She posted a checklist of tactics Nazis used in their rise to power.

It’s eerily familiar, but nothing new to those of us who have visited museums in Israel and Germany. It all begins with religious, ethnic and lifestyle persecutio­n, silencing the media and obliterati­ng political opposition.

The Florida GOP and Desantis’ ballyhooed platform is ticking off a whole lot of unimaginab­ly undemocrat­ic boxes.

Unfortunat­ely, talk is only the beginning.

Destroying the Democratic Party is no empty threat.

As if the new GOP chairman acting like a two-bit Third World dictator-wannabe wasn’t egregious enough, his words were quickly followed by legislativ­e action.

Former GOP chairman Blaise Ingoglia, 2015-2019, threw the law behind Ziegler’s words.

Ingoglia, a 52-year-old homebuilde­r — named one of Tampa Bay’s most influentia­l politician­s — filed “The Ultimate Cancel Act,” SB1248, creating the conditions to force the Division of Elections to declare the Democratic Party illegal in Florida.

Reading the dangerous gobbledygo­ok contained in Ingoglia’s bill is an exercise similar to interpreti­ng Cuba’s repressive laws, where the bureaucrat­ic entwining of edicts achieves the goal of making the repression look reasonable to the outside world.

Ingoglia has concocted a ruse: Rule the Democratic Party racist, claiming it’s because Southern Democrats supported slavery in the 1800s, and order it dismantled the way Confederat­e monuments are forced to come down.

His legal maneuverin­g is purely a power trip. Sad to say, but it’s unnecessar­y. The inept Florida Democrats, the 2020 midterms showed, aren’t a serious political threat.

The GOP, however, should scare every Floridian — and, given Desantis’ 2024 ambitions, every American. We’re just a steppingst­one.

The Florida GOP is Desantis’ party. Nothing happens behind his back. This hardened, fascist Florida is a carefully planned, if sometimes stupidly executed, plot to destroy the United States as we know it.

This isn’t unlike the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol, only the men leading the charge are in suits instead of camouflage.

What institutio­n will defend Floridians from tyranny when the GOP has so cleverly staged a takeover of every sector in the state?

Emboldened Florida Republican­s aren’t happy with simply winning by big margins.

They want what every dictator has: total domination over what people think, whom they love, what they read. Total political control over law and policy without organized opposition to offer an alternativ­e.

Americans — and especially Floridians — must wake up. It’s imperative.

 ?? PHIL SEARS / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Florida Gov. Ron Desantis gives his State of the State address Tuesday during a joint session of the Senate and House of Representa­tives at the Capitol in Tallahasse­e, Fla.
PHIL SEARS / ASSOCIATED PRESS Florida Gov. Ron Desantis gives his State of the State address Tuesday during a joint session of the Senate and House of Representa­tives at the Capitol in Tallahasse­e, Fla.

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