South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Wealthy paid for DeSantis’ campaign

- By Jeffrey Schweers

TALLAHASSE­E — A group of super-wealthy people helped foot the bill as Gov. Ron DeSantis barnstorme­d Florida and the rest of the country campaignin­g for his reelection and stumping for political allies running up to the midterm elections this month.

They include hoteliers, developers, restaurate­urs, investment brokers, trucking magnates, health executives, gas station and

convenienc­e store owners, and oil

distributo­rs, some of whom benefited from appointmen­ts to state boards and from laws enacted by DeSantis. Those include the state’s gas tax holiday, raising the commission for retailers on lottery ticket sales, earmarking millions of advertisin­g dollars for Visit Florida, and lifting the state’s lockdown during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Not only did the extremely rich donate tens of millions of dollars in cash to the governor, they made more than $500,000 worth of in-kind contributi­ons to cover his transporta­tion costs, an Orlando Sentinel review of state records shows.

That doesn’t include the nearly $200,000 in transporta­tion costs covered by the Republican Party of Florida. Nor does it include thousands of dollars in direct payments for hotels, commercial airplane tickets and other travel expenses.

“It’s the old campaign finance thing to curry favor with the governor and gain private access to him,” said Ben Wilcox, research director for the nonpartisa­n organizati­on Integrity Florida.

“Something we’ve seen is corporate owners providing free flights and then they happen to be on the flight or have their lobbyist on the plane with the politician,” Wilcox said. “That’s access you can’t buy. They’re not doing it out of a sense of good government, they’re doing it for influence.”

Aubrey Jewett, a University of Central Florida political science professor, agreed it’s a great way to “get the ear” of a politician and more access than the average voter.

A governor who travels a lot

DeSantis clearly loves to travel, as seen by the $145,000 he racked up in travel expenses while in Congress, and his annual travel expenses paid for by Florida taxpayers. His state travel expenses went up from $2 million for 2021 to $2.4 million for the 2022 fiscal year that ended June 30. The state plane he uses logged 139 days of flying time in the past 12 months.

The use of private planes is allowed under state campaign finance law as long as the candidate reports the cost as a campaign expenditur­e or in-kind contributi­on.

Campaign records filed with the state only provide a date for the contributi­on and whether it was for transporta­tion, lodging or food and beverage, but they don’t go into detail about the date or destinatio­n of any flight. So there is no way to trace how DeSantis got to Pennsylvan­ia to campaign for gubernator­ial candidate Doug Mastriano, Arizona for Kari Lake, or Las Vegas for Adam Laxalt, for example.

Records also don’t detail how DeSantis traveled to Orlando in February for CPAC, considered the pinnacle of uber-conservati­ve conference­s, or to other similar political events around the state and country. But records do show in-kind transporta­tion contributi­ons reported on the same days as those out-of-state events and the CPAC conference.

“Lack of details or specificit­y or transparen­cy is a loophole in state campaign law by design,” Wilcox said. “The system should be designed so there is complete transparen­cy for how those dollars are used. In-kind contributi­ons like

plane rides should be more specific and give dates and destinatio­ns of those flights, but there is no political will to tighten those loopholes.”

The records give at least a partial glimpse into the world of the millionair­es and billionair­es who foot the bill for the governor’s travel around the country.

Ralph “Larry” Roberts, founder of RLR Investment­s and R&L Carriers, an Ohio-based shipping and trucking company, and developer of the World Equestrian Center in Ocala, donated $275,000 in cash and

$20,000 of in-kind transporta­tion costs in October, the month before the election. One of his companies owns a Dassault Falcon 7X, a jet worth at least $18 million that seats

19 passengers. Other in-kind donors have private planes, too. Between them all, they could muster a fleet of executive jets worth tens of millions of dollars.

Another donor, Charles B. Johnson, founder of Franklin Templeton, co-owner of the San Francisco Giants and owner of two homes in Palm Beach, gave DeSantis $855,000 in cash and close to $15,000 of in-kind transporta­tion costs.

Daytona Beach developer Mori Hosseini, chairman of the University of Florida Board of Trustees, gave DeSantis $280,000 cash an in-kind transporta­tion costs of nearly $17,000 through his various companies.

Thomas Corr, a Vero Beach resident and President and CEO of the George E. Warren Corporatio­n, the largest importer of oil on the East and Gulf coast, gave DeSantis $234,000 in cash and $19,260 in transporta­tion costs. His company, TLC Leasing, gave an additional

$5,169 in-kind transporta­tion costs. Corr served on DeSantis’s first inaugural host committee.

Maximo Alvarez, owner of Doral-based Sunshine Gas Distributo­rs, which owns 360 gas stations, donated $135,000 in cash, and $9,961 for in-kind transporta­tion costs. DeSantis appointed Alvarez to the Florida State University Board of Trustees in 2021.

Companies owned by Aubrey Edge, head of First Coast Energy, one of the largest distributo­rs of Shell gasoline in the United States, donated $200,000 to DeSantis and nearly $31,000 of in-kind transporta­tion costs. DeSantis appointed Edge to the university Board of Governors in 2020.

The gas distributo­rs were the prime beneficiar­ies of October’s gas tax holiday. Gas retailers also got a

0.75 % raise on their commission on state lottery ticket sales, which was inserted into the back of the state budget bill at the last minute after a bill with similar language failed to get heard.

The language for that bill, filed by Rep. Ana Maria Rodriguez, R-Miami, was written by Nelson Diaz, a Southern Strategy lobbyist who represente­d two clients on this bill: Sunshine Gasoline Distributo­rs and the Florida Petroleum Marketers Associatio­n. Alvarez sits on the legislativ­e committee of the petroleum marketers associatio­n, while Edge is a member of the finance committee.

Undervalui­ng the costs?

According to one jet leasing website, the cost of leasing these jets range from $4,000 to $8,000 per flight hour. Donors could be undervalui­ng their in-kind donations, but under state campaign finance law, candidates only have to provide an estimate of the value of a commercial ticket for travel provided on a private plane for a similar route.

One potential ethical pitfall is whether the governor’s political office is coordinati­ng these flights with the campaign staff, Wilcox said.

Campaign records show that the campaign paid the Florida Department of Law Enforcemen­t $15,000 for three separate occasions when the governor used the state plane for campaign travel.

The state plane is owned by the FDLE and used for state business, FDLE spokesman Gretl Plessinger said. “If it is used for a campaign event, a campaign must reimburse FDLE.”

No further details were provided despite repeated requests to explain why the campaign reimbursed the state.

The DeSantis campaign did not respond to requests for comment. But campaign records show the dates of the payments correspond with dates the governor was traveling on official state business, suggesting he was piggybacki­ng state business with campaign events.

Hosseini, who was reappointe­d by DeSantis to the UF Board of Trustees in February 2021, was instrument­al in steering DeSantis’ controvers­ial Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo to a job at UF.

He also led the search committee for UF’s new president, Ben Sasse, a Republican U.S. senator from Nebraska. Sasse drew fire from students and faculty alike about his conservati­ve views.

Hosseini allowed Florida first lady Casey DeSantis to use his jet to fly from Tallahasse­e to northeast Florida to attend both a political GOP fundraiser held by a donor to her husband’s campaign and an official event to promote a federal grant for mental health, Politico reported at the time. Close coordinati­on between the governor’s office and DeSantis’ campaign staff was needed for the first lady to mix the two, Politico reported.

The state Department of Transporta­tion is building a $50 million exit ramp on Interstate 95 in Volusia County that provides access to one of Hosseini’s residentia­l developmen­ts.

 ?? SANTOS/ORLANDO SENTINEL TOMÁS DINIZ ?? Gov. Ron DeSantis throws hats toward the crowd during CPAC at the Rosen Shingle Creek and Westgate Resort in Orlando on February 24.
SANTOS/ORLANDO SENTINEL TOMÁS DINIZ Gov. Ron DeSantis throws hats toward the crowd during CPAC at the Rosen Shingle Creek and Westgate Resort in Orlando on February 24.

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