The Fort Morgan Times

Deference or ‘vengeance’? Which Ron DeSantis has returned to rule over Florida?

- By Ana Ceballas, Max Greenwood, Lawrence Mower, and Romy Ellenbogen Miami Herald

TALLAHASSE­E, Fla. — Wounded as a national figure in Republican politics, Ron DeSantis has retreated to Florida, where lawmakers and lobbyists have been waiting to see which version of the governor they’re going to get.

Will DeSantis once again dominate the policy agenda in Tallahasse­e? Will he be subservien­t to former President Donald Trump? Will the governor, who has three years left on his final term, face a less compliant Republican majority?

“The fact is, he doesn’t have a $100 million political action committee anymore to scare everyone with,” said Aubrey Jewett, a political science professor at the University of Central Florida. “He doesn’t have the intimidati­on power he used to have and, to an extent, he’s still a lame duck.”

But if there were any question about which governor was returning to the Florida Capitol, DeSantis is already showing Floridians and legislativ­e leaders that he intends to wield the full power of his office in the time he has left.

Within 24 hours of suspending his campaign, DeSantis held back-to-back meetings and calls with legislativ­e staff, chimed in on national border security issues and reminded Florida lawmakers — who are in the midst of the annual legislativ­e session — that his veto powers still loom large over them.

On Monday, DeSantis sank a GOP-led effort to use Florida taxpayer money to pay off Trump’s legal expenses. The show of force — publicly displayed on the social media platform X — was seen by some as his allies as an indication of the governor being back in Tallahasse­e in full force.

“Anyone who thinks that Ron DeSantis is just going to sit back and not engage in the process in the same way that he’s engaged before, a) does not know Ron DeSantis very well or b) has not been paying attention,” said Sen. Blaise Ingoglia, a close ally of the governor.

DeSantis’ past actions hover over Tallahasse­e DeSantis’ political ascent can be traced back to the attention he got when he leaned on the Florida Legislatur­e to push an aggressive agenda that rewired state institutio­ns with right-wing orthodoxy, punished critics and rallied enough support from conservati­ves that he was seen as best-positioned to be the heir to the MAGA movement after Trump’s loss in the 2020 presidenti­al race.

DeSantis cast Florida for years as the state where “woke goes to die,” touting his efforts to bar critical race theory from classrooms, prohibit instructio­n on sexual orientatio­n and gender identity in Florida schools and restrict abortion access.

He tried to bring the Florida blueprint to the rest of the country, promising Republican­s that he would “Make America Florida.”

But after that pitch failed to resonate with voters in Iowa and New Hampshire, there’s some speculatio­n that DeSantis might dial back the culture wars and refocus on more state-specific issues in his second act as governor.

“I don’t think that the politics of Tallahasse­e are going to be nationaliz­ed for the next three years like they have been,” said Justin Sayfie, a Florida-based lobbyist and fundraiser for DeSantis’ now-defunct presidenti­al campaign.

Other allies of the governor, though, are expecting him to double down — whether it’s his war on “woke,” his response to illegal immigratio­n in and out of the state or addressing water-quality problems in the state.

“I think we’re gonna see more of the same governor we’ve seen,” Republican Party of Florida Chairman Evan Power said in an interview. “He’s consistent­ly delivered on a conservati­ve agenda, and I think we’re gonna see more of that.”

So what’s on the agenda? For now, the governor’s exact agenda is elusive. Some would even say unpredicta­ble. But earlier this month, DeSantis told Florida lawmakers to “stay the course” and to “keep doing what works.” At the time, critics said the speech was written more for Iowa and New Hampshire voters than Floridians, but now it sounds more like a message about his plans for the future in Florida.

“While the campaign has ended, the mission continues,” DeSantis wrote to supporters hours after he suspended his presidenti­al campaign on Sunday. “Down here in Florida, we will continue to show the country how to lead.”

Three weeks into the 60-day legislativ­e session, Republican leaders have not been pushing polarizing culture-war issues as aggressive­ly. But even so they are advancing proposals that would ban teachers and other government employees from displaying the pride flag, revamp the state’s defamation laws and require state-issued identifica­tion cards to reflect a person’s sex assigned at birth, and impose requiremen­ts for insurers who cover gender-affirming care.

“There’s plenty of time in this session,” said state Rep. Alex Andrade, R-Pensacola. “If he wanted to double down on the stuff he cares about, he can.”

Democrats, relegated to superminor­ity status, hope that his stinging loss on the national stage will bring a different DeSantis back to the Capitol. Democratic Senate Leader Lauren Book said she hopes DeSantis will no longer pursue his culture-war agenda, given that it failed to persuade voters outside of Florida.

“We’re going to continue to try to unbury ourselves from his political ambitions and the things he did to our beautiful state,” Book said.

Others foresee the opposite: Florida Democratic

Party Chairwoman Nikki Fried fears DeSantis will be coming back to Florida “with vengeance.”

“He’s going to want to prove to the whole nation that what he was doing here in Florida was right. So I don’t know exactly which policy perspectiv­es he’s going to be pushing during this legislativ­e session, but this is a call to action for every Floridian in our state,” Fried said.

It’s all about relationsh­ips DeSantis remains highly influentia­l over the Legislatur­e and has a strong relationsh­ip with House Speaker Paul Renner and Senate President Kathleen Passidomo. The two Republican­s, who carry the agenda in each chamber, have said they largely agree with the governor’s priorities. They even campaigned alongside the governor in Iowa.

Those power dynamics will change later this year, when Sen. Ben Albritton, RWauchula, will become Senate president and state Rep. Daniel Perez, R-Miami, will become House Speaker. On Monday, both said they expect the governor to continue focusing on the same issues as in recent years, which they say they also largely support.

“I think it is important that people focus on what we’ve accomplish­ed over the last several years instead of just the headlines that actually are used as clickbait more often than not,” Perez said in reference to the culture-war agenda.

Albritton cast cold water on the idea that the governor has lost any clout by bowing out of the presidenti­al election.

“I believe that clout or influence is a relative term, but it is all based on relationsh­ips,” Albritton said. “I have a great relationsh­ip with him.”

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