Miami Herald (Sunday)

Florida GOP has cozied up to corporatio­ns for years. Now it wants to punish ‘woke’ Disney?

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Republican­s just wrapped up a legislativ­e session in which they they did favors for big corporate donors like Florida Power & Light Co. and the sugar industry. But now, suddenly — after the Walt Disney Co. pledged to end campaign donations in Florida over its opposition to the bill opponents call “Don’t say gay” — they are anti-corporate crusaders.

Please.

“As a matter of first principle, I don’t support special privileges in law, just because a company is powerful, and they’ve been able to wield a lot of power,” Gov. DeSantis said Thursday in West Palm Beach.

Or just because a company is “woke” is probably what he meant to say. The governor has a derisive definition of the term. But we say “woke” is shorthand for treating others with a measure of respect, with little regard for how they show up.

If DeSantis truly wants to end “special privileges,” then lawmakers will have their work cut out for them, revisiting every corporate giveaway embedded in Florida law. They could begin by looking into 99% of companies in the state that avoid paying corporate income taxes, as the Orlando Sentinel reported in 2019.

Republican­s are already concocting ways to wield their revenge on Disney, a powerhouse in Florida politics that donated almost $5 million in 2020 to DeSantis, political candidates and both parties. State Rep. Spencer Roach, R-Fort Myers, tweeted he’s been talking with fellow lawmakers about repeal- ing a 1967 law that “allows Dis- ney to act as its own government” in Orange County.

INFLICTING HARM

We support Republican­s — and Democrats — revisiting laws that support special interests at the expense of everyday Floridians. But they’re not looking to right the wrongs of the past. They are using government to inflict harm on private entities that don’t support their ideology.

This looks an autocracy, not DeSantis’ “free state of Florida.”

As consumers and employees pressure corporatio­ns to take a stand on pressing issues, we will see more of this kind of performati­ve politics by Republican­s.

The point is to keep CEOs sending them checks while keeping them cowed into silence.

Disney worked behind the scenes to stop House Bill 1557, but the company was late to the game in opposing it publicly.

The bill, signed by DeSantis on March 28, banned classroom discussion­s on sexual orientatio­n and gender identity in grades K-3.

Make no mistake — though the GOP acts as if Mickey

Mouse is the incarnatio­n of “wokeism,” corporate influence in Tallahasse­e is thriving.

For two years in a row, Republican­s and Democrats did the bidding of sugar growers such as U.S. Sugar Corp. Last year, they shielded farmers from lawsuits related to cane burning, which causes respirator­y issues among residents of the poor and majority Black Glades region south of Lake Okeechobee.

DeSantis signed that bill into law — because what’s wrong with giving kids asthma when the real threat to society is that they might learn in school that people can be anything other than straight?

This year, in a last-minute maneuver, the Legislatur­e made another concession to Big Sugar that creates more hurdles for state water managers in charge of Everglades restoratio­n, as the Sun Sentinel Editorial Board reported.

If DeSantis truly is against

“special privileges,” he should veto Senate Bill 2508 and push to repeal the cane-burning law he signed last year.

FPL WEIGHED IN

Lawmakers from both parties have also been allies in FPL’s quest to curb the expansion of rooftop solar panels. This year they approved a controvers­ial bill that phases out financial incentives for homeowners who install those panels. FPL helped craft the initial version of the bill and followed up with campaign contributi­ons to the spon- sor, the Herald reported.

That’s another opportunit­y for DeSantis to make a bold statement through a veto.

Disney, of course, also is on the list of the state’s corporate beneficiar­ies.

When DeSantis pushed to ban social-media platforms from removing political candidates last year, he signed a bill that creates an exemption for Disney’s streaming platform (that law is currently held up in court). Now he’s doing an about-face, saying the exemption was “embarrassi­ng” and that he wants to repeal it. But emails obtained by former Orlando Sentinel reporter

Jason Garcia, who now runs the website Seeking Rents, show that a top DeSantis aide worked with lawmakers to help Disney obtain that “special privilege.”

In 2019, Disney successful­ly pushed to change legislatio­n that would have exposed hotels to lawsuits if they didn’t do enough to prevent human traffickin­g at their facilities. The company also successful­ly convinced lawmakers to change laws dealing with how theme parks must deal with the belongings visitors leave behind, Florida Trend magazine reported.

All of this, by the way, happened during DeSantis’ term.

But that was then. Florida Republican­s today are vowing to end the pay-to-play system that has ruled Tallahasse­e and politics in general. But, they won’t. They will continue to cozy up to big donors as long as those donors don’t dare oppose the party in its culture wars.

We’ve seen how DeSantis & Co. abuse their political power and mistreat those whom they consider the enemy. It’s chilling to see how they are willing to punish a company they’ve considered a friend.

This isn’t accountabi­lity, it’s revenge politics — hypocritic­al and dangerous.

 ?? JOE BURBANK Orlando Sentinel / TNS ?? Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis vowed to fight Disney’s “special privileges” after the company opposed a parental-rights bill because of its impact on LGBTQ youth.
JOE BURBANK Orlando Sentinel / TNS Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis vowed to fight Disney’s “special privileges” after the company opposed a parental-rights bill because of its impact on LGBTQ youth.

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