The Guardian (USA)

Ron DeSantis takes control of Disney’s governing district after ‘don’t say gay’ row

- Ed Pilkington

The Republican governor of Florida, Ron DeSantis, has signed a bill that wrests control of Walt Disney World’s self-governing district, in a move seen as punishing the company for its opposition to his so-called “don’t say gay” law.

“Today the corporate kingdom finally comes to an end,” he said at the bill signing in Lake Buena Vista in his trademark bullish style. “There’s a new sheriff in town, and accountabi­lity will be the order of the day.”

DeSantis’s head-on dispute with Disney, and the legislatio­n banning classroom teaching on sexual orientatio­n and gender identity that prompted it, are two signature moves by the Republican designed to affirm his status as a culture warrior. He is widely expected to take those credential­s to the national stage in next year’s presidenti­al election in which he would face another brash Florida Republican – Donald Trump.

The bill gives DeSantis the power to appoint the five members of the board that controls government services for the Reedy Creek district covering Disney’s Florida theme park properties that stretch over 27,000 acres (11,000 hectares). It brings to an end the Mouse House’s special privileges which had stood for more than half a century, granting the company its own police and fire department and autonomy over zoning and other public functions.

Disney World, with its 75,000 employees, is the largest employer in central Florida. It attracted over 36 million visitors in 2021, according to the Themed Entertainm­ent Associatio­n.

The collision between one of the rising stars in the increasing­ly farright Republican party and the worldrenow­ned entertainm­ent conglomera­te began in March 2022 when DeSantis signed the officially titled “Parental Rights in Education” bill. It barred instructio­n of gender identity and sexual orientatio­n issues in kindergart­en to third-grade classes, spanning the ages of about five to nine.

The “don’t say gay” measure formed part of a spate of similar anti-LGBTQ + bills that have swept the US amid a rightwing assault on progressiv­e policies they mock as “woke”. It provoked an outcry from LGBTQ+ and other groups across the country, with Joe Biden denouncing it as “hateful”.

After initially hesitating to be drawn into the affray, Disney’s chief executive at the time, Bob Chapek, came out against the changes. He said he had called the governor to express his disapprova­l and vowed to suspend all political donations in Florida.

DeSantis’s retaliatio­n came swiftly. He convened a special legislativ­e session and invited the Republican-controlled legislatur­e to dissolve Disney’s self-governing district.

As a further nod to the politicise­d nature of his action, DeSantis made overt the connection between his hostile move against Disney and his antiLGBTQ+ legislatio­n. He appointed one of the architects of the “don’t say gay” law to sit on the new five-person board controllin­g services in the Disney area.

The new board member Bridget Ziegler is married to the chairman of the Florida Republican party. She was a founder of the rightwing education group Moms for Liberty.

The other four members of the panel are: Martin Garcia, an influentia­l Republican lawyer in Tampa who donated $50,000 to DeSantis’s reelection coffers last year; Brian Aungst, an attorney who is son of a former Republican mayor of Clearwater; Mike Sasso, an attorney; and Ron Peri, founder of the Gathering ministry which espouses Christian nationalis­m.

At the ceremony ending Disney’s special status on Monday, DeSantis portrayed his move not as a culture war tactic but as a question of good governance. “Allowing a corporatio­n to control its own government is bad policy, especially when the corporatio­n makes decisions that impact an entire region,” he said.

“This legislatio­n ends Disney’s selfgovern­ing status, makes Disney live under the same laws as everybody else, and ensures that Disney pays its debts and fair share of taxes.”

Speakers at the event included a parent who criticized Disney for speaking out against the state’s education bill, saying the company “chose the wrong side of the moral argument”. Another person who identified himself as a longtime Disney theme park employee took issue with the company’s policies regarding vaccinatio­ns.

 ?? Photograph: John Raoux/AP ?? Ron DeSantis is expected to bolster his conservati­ve agenda before a presumed announceme­nt for his candidacy for US president.
Photograph: John Raoux/AP Ron DeSantis is expected to bolster his conservati­ve agenda before a presumed announceme­nt for his candidacy for US president.

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