The Morning Call (Sunday)

Stop it! Disney, Fla. need each other

- By Stephen L. Carter Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

The firestorm ignited by Walt Disney Co.’s lawsuit against Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and other state officials offers further evidence, if any is needed, that our democracy remains deep in its silly season. Disney’s legal claims are straightfo­rward, and most of them seem strong. The politics, however, are utterly inside out.

We need not linger over the facts. Angry about what he sees as Disney’s endorsemen­t of “woke” ideology, the governor has persuaded the Legislatur­e to dissolve the Reedy Creek Improvemen­t District, which in its roughly six decades of existence has enabled Disney World to act, in effect, as a self-governing enclave. In its place, the state has created a new entity — whose members are appointed by the governor.

Stripped of a few dozen pages of highly quotable verbiage, Disney’s complaint against DeSantis boils down to breach of contract. In particular, the company claims that certain developmen­t agreements into which it entered with the RCID can’t be abrogated by its newly created successor, the Central Florida Tourism Oversight District.

This is a simple, uncomplica­ted legal argument. Even the federal government is usually expected to abide by its contracts. In Florida too — although there exist a handful of exceptions — the state’s courts generally treat developmen­t agreements between private corporatio­ns and local government­s as legally enforceabl­e contracts. Thus all that’s necessary is for the Florida courts to decide whether the Oversight District’s actions breached the agreement with Disney, and, if the answer is yes, whether the state has any defense — the sort of dispute that lawyers follow with interest, but is hardly worthy of public attention.

Disney also makes a series of constituti­onal arguments: that private property is being taken without compensati­on, that the contracts clause of the Constituti­on is being violated, that punishing the corporatio­n for its speech violates the

First Amendment. I suspect that these claims were added in part to get around the provision of Florida law that requires the modificati­on or revocation of developmen­t agreements to comply with subsequent legislatio­n.

My libertaria­n side agrees with the company on most of these points, but I doubt the courts will ever consider them. For that matter, I doubt that the courts will ever adjudicate the breach-of-contract claim. Why?

Because I still expect rationalit­y to

prevail. Disney needs Florida; Florida needs Disney. In the end, the parties are likely to find a middle ground.

Meanwhile, the politics of this fight are all bollixed up.

It’s strange to see my friends on the left cheering for Disney. The most obvious reason is the long-standing progressiv­e belief that the RCID was an outrageous transfer of government power to a private entity.

Here’s Cory Doctorow, writing in 2005: “(I)t is a uniquely autonomous zone, which hardly has to answer to the state government at all. The zone can build its own nukes, run its own building codes, and generally do whatever it likes.”

In his sobering 2001 book “Married to the Mouse,” the historian Richard Foglesong calls the original deal “a testament to the power of pixie dust and Disney mystique.”

That sentiment has never faded.

In 2013, for example, when Disney’s expansion demanded two new parking garages, an article in the Orlando Sentinel complained that the corporatio­n wasn’t

shelling out any money: “The giant resort will instead have its personal government, Reedy Creek Improvemen­t District, pick up the estimated $85 million tab.”

So to see Disney treated a progressiv­e hero for defending the RCID is ... weird. If the left really wants to take the view that corporatio­ns can’t be punished for their speech, or that over-regulation is a taking of property, I’d say welcome to the club.

But somehow I doubt that their support for Disney is anything other than a momentary convenienc­e.

It’s equally strange to see my friends on the right supporting the DeSantis administra­tion’s effort to bring Disney’s special regulatory district under direct state control. After all, the RCID was a great conservati­ve success story. As the libertaria­n commentato­r David Boaz notes, the company’s accomplish­ments in and around Orlando provide evidence that for-profit entities can provide many public goods that liberals argue only government can create.

Moreover, the impetus for the dissolutio­n of the RCID wasn’t some sense that

Disney was self-dealing — a few years ago, the company even declined to take advantage of a statewide lowering of the property tax — but anger about the company’s positions on contested public issues. A fit of pique is hardly the sort of motive for government action conservati­ves usually applaud.

Such are the dismal vicissitud­es of a world where principle yields readily to the desire for partisan advantage. Progressiv­es are rooting for one of the wealthiest and most powerful corporatio­ns in the world, whose special developmen­t district the left until recently considered a nefarious government giveaway. Conservati­ves are rooting for the authority of angry public officials to regulate a private business into submission because they dislike what it has to say.

The silly season indeed. I only hope that we’re able to pass back through the looking glass to the land of principle before we’re stuck forever on the wrong side of the mirror.

 ?? ALLIE GOULDING/TAMPA BAY TIMES 2019 ?? Stephen L. Carter argues that Walt Disney Co. and Florida are likely to find a middle ground in their battle.
ALLIE GOULDING/TAMPA BAY TIMES 2019 Stephen L. Carter argues that Walt Disney Co. and Florida are likely to find a middle ground in their battle.

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