New York Post

RON: ‘WE’RE NO. 1!’

DeSantis touts Fla. with eye on WH

- By VICTOR NAVA

Gov. Ron DeSantis in his State of the State address Tuesday touted Florida’s strong economy and low crime rate while blasting the Biden administra­tion’s “catch and release” immigratio­n policies — further fueling speculatio­n that the Republican has his eyes set on the White House in 2024.

“Florida is No. 1, and working together, we will ensure that Florida remains the No. 1 state in the United States,” DeSantis told Florida lawmakers in Tallahasse­e.

“Working together, we have met big challenges, and we led the nation on many big issues. We don’t make excuses. We don’t complain. We just produce results,” the popular governor added.

In his roughly 20-minute-long speech, clocking in almost 50 minutes shorter than President Biden’s State of the Union address last month, DeSantis called Florida the fastest growing state in the nation. With him as its chief executive, Florida ranked No. 1 in net in-migration, new business formation and economic growth among large states, he said.

DeSantis, re-elected in a landslide last November, highlighte­d that Florida has more people employed now than before the COVID-19 pandemic, and one of the lowest unemployme­nt rates on record, at 2.7%.

He also boasted that in the last two years, the state has seen its largest budget surpluses in history while having the lowest per-capita state tax and lowest per-capita state debt burden among large states.

“And, maybe most famously, we rank No. 1 for protection­s of our citizens against the biomedical security state, from prohibitin­g ‘jab or job’ mandates, to banning vaccine passports, to ensuring hospital visitation rights,” DeSantis added.

“We defied the experts, we buck the elites, we ignored the chatter, we did it our way, the Florida way. And the result is that we are the No. 1 destinatio­n for our fellow Americans who are looking for a better life,” he said.

The 44-year-old Florida governor lauded his state’s crime rate, just a week after Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot was ousted by voters over her handling of rampant crime in the Illinois Democratic stronghold.

“We are number one in law-enforcemen­t recruitmen­t and support. Florida’s crime rate stands at a 50-year low,” DeSantis said. “Florida’s proud to stand for law and order,” he declared. “We are tough on crime and we support the men and women of law enforcemen­t. And we have made it very clear to prosecutor­s who believe they can disregard the law, you will be held accountabl­e.”

While never mentioning Biden, 80, by name directly, DeSantis ripped the administra­tion’s policies as contributi­ng to illegal immigratio­n. “We believe that borders matter and we have fought against illegal immigratio­n in the state of Florida from banning sanctuary cities to suing the Biden administra­tion over its catch-and-release policies to transporti­ng illegal aliens to sanctuary jurisdicti­ons. We have put Floridians first and we will continue to do that,” DeSantis argued.

The governor’s wife, Casey, a breast-cancer survivor, drew the loudest applause of the speech when her husband praised her work in “Florida’s battle against cancer” and said she is “cancer-free.”

“I was here last year saying we would be able to announce that she was cancer-free, and I can tell you she is cancer-free and she is doing better than ever,” DeSantis said.

The governor’s speech comes amid a busy travel schedule signaling a strong likelihood that he will launch a 2024 presidenti­al primary campaign this year.

Donald Trump, who announced his third White House run last November, is the front-runner among 2024 GOP presidenti­al candidates with an average of 45% support in early polls, according to RealClearP­olitics.

DeSantis is the 76-year-old former president’s most formidable adversary, averaging 29% support, per RealClearP­olitics.

 ?? ?? STAR: Casey DeSantis, with son Mason, 4, shines Tuesday as husband Ron (below) announces her winning battle against breast cancer.
STAR: Casey DeSantis, with son Mason, 4, shines Tuesday as husband Ron (below) announces her winning battle against breast cancer.
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