Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Abbott and DeSantis going too far

- Carl P. Leubsdorf

There’s a an old saying in politics that the best government makes the best politics. But Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis seem to be approachin­g that backward.

Much of their current legislativ­e and executive agendas seems designed more to strengthen their standing with the GOP’s conservati­ve base than to meet the serious needs of their states.

Along with massive war chests, it’s a sign that both governors are focused as much on the GOP’s 2024 presidenti­al race as on their current jobs or even their 2022 reelection races, in which both are favored.

Their agendas have many similar aspects: imposing new limits on abortion rights, tightening voting laws to meet unproven allegation­s of fraud, and restrictin­g local government­s from requiring antiCOVID masks and mandates.

Some measures raise questions about the impact on the rights of individual­s and local government or challenge the constraint­s of constituti­onality. But the policies have helped to maintain the governors’ popularity with their bases.

In recent weeks, however, both governors may have gone too far.

Abbott took a pair of questionab­le initiative­s designed to show he is doing more to contain the nation’s porous southern border than the Biden administra­tion.

DeSantis strong-armed the obeisant Florida Legislatur­e into passing a redistrict­ing plan that may well violate the Voting Rights Act by eliminatin­g two majority Black U.S. House districts.

Earlier, Abbott sent thousands of Texas National Guard troops to the border with little evident effect. Last week, he dispatched state troopers to stop much of the incoming truck traffic from Mexico to inspect it for contraband drugs and illegal immigrants.

He also launched a plan to bus migrants north to embarrass opponents of stricter border enforcemen­t.

Neither achieved the desired results. The enhanced border inspection­s, along with resistance by Mexican truckers, created a massive traffic jam. Abbott’s inspectors reportedly found many safety violations but few illegal materials or people, while threatenin­g spoilage of millions of dollars of Mexican agricultur­e products. Within days, he backed off, citing agreements with four Mexican states that mainly reiterated prior efforts.

Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador called Abbott’s actions

“despicable.”

In Washington, the arriving migrants were greeted by social groups and other charitable organizati­ons who welcomed them and planned to facilitate their settlement in the United States. Many migrants said they were happy to be there.

The entire episode bore resemblanc­e to a failed 1960s effort by Southern segregatio­nists to embarrass liberals staging “freedom rides” desegregat­ing Southern transporta­tion facilities by sending poor Black families to northern communitie­s.

Meanwhile, in Florida, DeSantis signed a new law critics nicknamed “Don’t Say Gay,” which limits classroom discussion­s of sexual-related issues. The Legislatur­e also passed his “Stop WOKE (the Wrongs to Our Kids and Employers) Act” curbing workplace and classroom discussion­s of diversity issues and stripped the special tax status of one of his critics, the Walt Disney Co.

Last week, he took the unusual step of inserting himself into post-census congressio­nal redistrict­ing, expanding what had been a typical effort by a majority party — Florida’s Republican­s — to take political advantage of the minority.

Since release of the 2020 census figures, both parties have tried to do that but encountere­d legal barriers. Ohio and New York state courts have blocked efforts by Republican­s in the former and Democrats in the latter to enact one-sided redistrict­ing plans.

DeSantis’ plan goes beyond bolstering his party’s numbers. Florida Republican­s currently have a 16-11 majority in the congressio­nal delegation, and a GOP legislativ­e plan would have added the lone new seat for a 17-11 majority.

On Thursday, the Legislatur­e approved it, giving the GOP a 20-8 margin and eliminatin­g districts represente­d by Reps. Val Demings in central Florida and Al Lawson in northern Florida, redrawing the lines so the areas they represent would be folded into majority white Republican districts.

The Voting Rights Act makes it illegal to provide some members of the electorate with “less opportunit­y than other members of the electorate … to elect representa­tives of their choice,” though it doesn’t provide “a right to have members of a protected class elected in numbers equal to their proportion in the population.”

In a sense, DeSantis seeks to expand on what Abbott and the Texas GOP did in their post-2020 redistrict­ing by reducing the number of Hispanic-majority districts at a time when the state’s population growth is mainly Hispanic.

Florida Democrats made clear they will appeal the redistrict­ing plan, and federal courts will ultimately decide the issue, as they will in Texas.

One aspect of good government is fair representa­tion. Whatever the legal outcome, however, Abbott and DeSantis have once again shown that their No. 1 governing principle is the satisfacti­on of their conservati­ve political bases.

 ?? ??
 ?? JOHN RAOUX/AP ?? Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida holds up a 15-week abortion ban law after signing it on April 14.
JOHN RAOUX/AP Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida holds up a 15-week abortion ban law after signing it on April 14.
 ?? ?? Abbott
Abbott

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States