Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Governor not tipping hand about presidenti­al bid

DeSantis: ‘Wouldn’t you like to know?’

- By Steven Lemongello

Gov. Ron DeSantis still isn’t ready to announce any presidenti­al plans despite another Republican jumping into the race.

The governor on Tuesday also tried to deflect controvers­y over school library books, including one on baseball legend Roberto Clemente that was removed in Duval County.

At an event in Jacksonvil­le, a reporter brought up Nikki Haley, a former South Carolina governor and U.S. ambassador to the United Nations who launched a bid Tuesday for the GOP nomination for president in 2024.

Asked if he was planning on following suit, DeSantis responded, “Wouldn’t you like to know?”

The answer drew laughter and applause from supporters, crowds of which he routinely gathers for news conference­s.

DeSantis is reportedly building a campaign behind the scenes in preparatio­n for a widely expected presidenti­al bid, with an announceme­nt that could come in May after the Legislatur­e’s regular session ends.

Even though he hasn’t officially declared a bid for the White House, DeSantis has been continuous­ly attacked by former President Trump since Trump’s reelection launch in November.

Trump has said DeSantis has been “disloyal,” criticized his COVID-19 shutdown in 2020, and called him “Ron DeSanctimo­nious.” The New York Times reported his latest nickname for the governor is “Meatball Ron.”

DeSantis was also asked about Duval County schools putting more than a million books up for review to make sure they meet new state guidelines, including more than 100 books seemingly permanentl­y removed.

DeSantis said images of empty bookshelve­s were a “fake narrative,” adding, “nothing that we’ve done since I’ve been governor has done anything [like] that. There is a longstandi­ng Florida law that prohibits an adult from giving a school child pornograph­y. … So I think they’re trying to do things to virtue-signal. I think it’s all politicall­y motivated.”

But Duval Schools wrote in January that because of the “antiwoke” law pushed through by DeSantis last year, new guidance from the state requires books be free not only of pornograph­y, but also “discrimina­tion in such a way that ‘an individual, by virtue of his or her race, color, sex, or national origin is inherently racist or oppressive, whether consciousl­y or unconsciou­sly.’ ”

In Duval, according to the nonprofit group PEN America, more than 30 of the 176 books seemingly on permanent bans were by Hispanic authors or about Hispanic characters and people, including “Roberto Clemente: Pride of the Pittsburgh Pirates” by Jonah Winter and Raúl Colón.

The book describes the discrimina­tion Clemente experience­d as a Black Puerto Rican playing in 1950s and 1960s America, which could have triggered its removal under the new guidance.

Asked specifical­ly about the Clemente book, DeSantis called it “politics” and claimed without providing any evidence that school unions were “doing it unilateral­ly to try to create an issue.”

DeSantis said state education officials are willing to help school boards decide what is appropriat­e.

“Our Department of Education will be working very quickly, if they need any type of advice on that,” DeSantis said.

 ?? FILE ?? Ron DeSantis deflected questions about a run for president in 2024, despite Republican Nikki Haley announcing her bid.
FILE Ron DeSantis deflected questions about a run for president in 2024, despite Republican Nikki Haley announcing her bid.

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