Orlando Sentinel

■ DeSantis threatens CBS over Sunday’s “6 0 Minutes” story.

- By Steven Lemongello

Gov. Ron DeSantis threatened CBS with unspecifie­d “consequenc­es” over Sunday’s “60 Minutes” story about coronaviru­s vaccine favoritism, saying he was “going to bite back and hold [CBS] accountabl­e.”

“What they’re saying is a total crock, that somehow only Publix was getting [the vaccine] is nonsense,” DeSantis said at a press conference in the Panhandle on Tuesday, as he denied again that the grocery giant’s $100,000 contributi­on to his campaign influenced vaccine decisions. “And we told them it was that and they cut it out. They spliced it because they can’t handle the truth. … So they went for the smear.”

But the bulk of the story, which generally rehashed earlier stories reported in Florida, actually pointed out the disparity in how vaccines were administer­ed in Palm Beach County, with the rich jumping to the front of the line over low-income residents who live 25 miles or more from a Publix.

DeSantis and the Republican Party’s fierce pushback against the story also sidesteppe­d the issue of vaccinatio­n sites set up in wealthy senior communitie­s developed by DeSantis donor Pat Neal, which were also mentioned in the “60 Minutes” piece.

“There was an apparent weak

ness in the CBS presentati­on on which they have seized in an attempt to counter the main thrust of [the story],” said Mac Stipanovic­h, a Tallahasse­e consultant and anti-Trump Republican turned independen­t.

“They are majoring on the minors in order to avoid a detailed discussion of the overall issue of vaccinatio­n pay-to-play.”

DeSantis and the state GOP have pointed to denials of Publix favoritism from Democrat Jared Moskowitz, the director of the Florida Division of Emergency Management, as well as Democratic Palm Beach County Mayor Dave Kerner saying the report was “based on bad informatio­n [and] was intentiona­lly false.”

But Palm Beach County

Commission­er Melissa McKinlay, who represents the poorer Glades area of the county, countered Kerner on Twitter.

“I’m not getting into the pay-to-play argument,” McKinlay wrote. “That wasn’t my concern. My concern was [the] lack of Publix in Glades, which I warned State about PRIOR to Publix-only decision.”

CBS said in a statement that “60 Minutes” interviewe­d dozens of people about the story and requested interviews with DeSantis, who declined, and Moskowitz, who declined to be interviewe­d on camera until after the story’s deadline.

“When Florida state data revealed people of color were vaccinated at a much lower rate than their wealthier neighbors, ‘60 Minutes’ reported the facts surroundin­g the vaccine’s rollout, which is controlled by the governor,” the CBS statement said. “For over 50 years, the facts reported by ‘60 Minutes’ have often stirred debate and prompted strong reactions. Our story Sunday night speaks for itself.”

DeSantis and the state GOP have also criticized “60 Minutes” for the implicatio­n that Publix was the only pharmacy distributo­r of the vaccine in the state by not including that CVS and Walgreens also were early administra­tors of the vaccine.

Those other pharmacies, though, were initially only giving shots in nursing homes when the Publix program began in early January.

The Publix program was also criticized at the time for focusing on Republican-leaning counties except for Palm Beach.

The state does not have a contract with Publix, which has denied any connection between the $100,000 contributi­on and the vaccine program. The lack of a state contract was only revealed following an Orlando Sentinel public informatio­n request.

DeSantis’s focus on rebutting the Publix allegation, which included his defense of Publix as “one of the most popular brands in the state,” ignored the vaccine favoritism allegation­s in the three Southwest Florida properties owned by Neal, as well as similar allegation­s involving a wealthy developmen­t in Key Largo not mentioned in the “60 Minutes” story.

DeSantis has also denied those allegation­s, for which state Democrats have called for a federal investigat­ion.

The issues with parts of the story are “an opportunit­y for them [Republican­s], but it’s not going to undo the damage that was done,” Stipanovic­h said.

DeSantis’s office did not return requests for further comment.

 ?? TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY ?? Gov. Ron DeSantis has threatened CBS with “consequenc­es” over Sunday’s “60 Minutes” story about coronaviru­s vaccine favoritism.
TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY Gov. Ron DeSantis has threatened CBS with “consequenc­es” over Sunday’s “60 Minutes” story about coronaviru­s vaccine favoritism.

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