Los Angeles Times

DeSantis’ move falls flat

Residents of Martha’s Vineyard more than met the challenge when Florida’s governor dumped migrants on the island.

- By Bob Drogin Bob Drogin is a former reporter and editor for The Times who worked in New York, Manila, Johannesbu­rg and Washington.

Iwoke Thursday at my home in West Tisbury, one of six small towns on Martha’s Vineyard, to find deer munching my shrubs, an early fall chill in the air and the disturbing news that Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis had flown about 50 migrants, mostly from Venezuela, to the island’s airport.

Local officials were notified only 20 minutes before the migrants arrived. The migrants say they were told, falsely, they were headed to housing and jobs in New York or Boston.

It was cruel, of course. It was deeply cynical. But the disgracefu­l stunt made for striking political theater. DeSantis is sometimes described as Donald Trump with a brain, which, depending on your point of view, is either reassuring or very scary. DeSantis faces reelection this November and is considerin­g his own White House bid. His surgical strike into a distant liberal enclave showed he is serious as a heart attack, as they say in Florida, about competing for Trump’s voters.

As he undoubtedl­y wanted, DeSantis ginned up endless headlines and liberal outrage, catnip for his campaign. He told reporters Thursday that his goal was to share the burden of illegal immigratio­n with Democratic states. “It shouldn’t all fall on a handful of red states,” he said.

Still, his performanc­e clearly fell flat here. Using Florida taxpayers’ money, he chartered two planes to transport a few dozen people, including at least 10 children, thousands of miles, on flights originatin­g in San Antonio to a rural Massachuse­tts island that sees its population ebb and flow by tens of thousands every summer. A tourist bus or two more won’t make much difference here.

In recent months, DeSantis — who attended Yale and Harvard Law — has publicly mocked the Vineyard as a symbol of Democratic elitism. He apparently prefers the nearby smaller island of Nantucket, which even Vineyarder­s consider elitist. On Aug. 9, according to the Boston Globe, the Florida governor was scheduled to be the featured speaker at a $5,000-a-couple fundraiser sponsored by hedge fund owners on Nantucket.

If DeSantis hoped to spur anti-immigrant sentiment on the Vineyard, he failed. The island has welcomed immigrants for years. More than 12% of the 17,000 full-time residents are foreign born, according to the 2020 census. And for all the breathless reporting that calls the Vineyard a playground of the rich, it’s also an increasing­ly diverse community. Some 22% of residents are nonwhite.

In any case, islanders more than met the DeSantis challenge. St. Andrews Episcopal Church in Edgartown quickly rounded up 50 cots and mattresses and housed the migrants. An emergency room doctor came down from Boston, while lawyers offered pro bono services. Five restaurant­s donated far more food than the group could possibly eat. High school students studying Spanish came to translate. The Islanders Talk page on Facebook exploded with offers to help, and donations poured into a Community Services fund. So many volunteers rushed the church with toys, clothes, bedding and other supplies that the police finally pleaded for a stop to keep traffic flowing.

“We literally have everything we need,” Lisa Belcastro, the island’s homeless shelter coordinato­r, told reporters Thursday.

DeSantis isn’t alone of course. Republican Govs. Greg Abbott of Texas and Doug Ducey of Arizona have bused about 10,000 migrants to Washington, D.C., since April, overwhelmi­ng services so badly that last week District of Columbia Mayor Muriel Bowser declared a public emergency. On Thursday, two buses from Texas dropped 101 migrants from Colombia, Venezuela and other countries near Vice President Kamala Harris’ official residence.

“The fact that Fox News and not the Department of Homeland Security, the city or local NGOs were alerted about a plan to leave migrants, including children, on the side of a busy D.C. street makes clear that this is just a cruel, premeditat­ed political stunt,” White House Press Secretary Karine JeanPierre said.

The DeSantis migrants landed on the Vineyard on Wednesday afternoon and stayed two nights in Edgartown, famed for its stately homes and manicured lawns. The island is special this time of year. The summer crowds are mostly gone, the skies are cerulean and autumn leaves are starting to drop. But affordable housing is tight and the winter economy doesn’t have many jobs.

On Friday morning, carrying bags and new cellphones, the migrants voluntaril­y boarded buses for the ferry back to the mainland. Some on the street waved and applauded in support as the buses rolled away. For now, the migrants will live in dormitorie­s at a military base on Cape Cod while awaiting hearings to process their asylum claims.

At some point, perhaps, they can stake their claims on the American dream. They may yet thank DeSantis for the free ride away from intoleranc­e.

 ?? Ray Ewing Vineyard Gazette ?? ABOUT 50 migrants were transporte­d to Massachuse­tts with little warning. They are now housed at a military base on Cape Cod.
Ray Ewing Vineyard Gazette ABOUT 50 migrants were transporte­d to Massachuse­tts with little warning. They are now housed at a military base on Cape Cod.

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