The Palm Beach Post

Idalia sees politics put aside

- Jim Turner NEWS SERVICE OF FLORIDA

TALLAHASSE­E – Potential 2024 presidenti­al opponents Ron DeSantis and Joe Biden say they have set aside red-blue politics in disaster-recovery efforts.

Discussing federal assistance tied to Hurricane Idalia, the Maui wildfires and other extreme weather related to climate change, Biden on Wednesday said “believe it or not” politics hasn’t come up in phone calls with DeSantis. He said the focus remained on helping victims of the Category 3 Hurricane Idalia, which crashed into the Keaton Beach area in North Florida’s Big Bend earlier in the day.

“I was down there (in Florida) when the last major storm (Hurricane Ian in Sept. 2022),” the president said. “I spent a lot of time with him (DeSantis) walking from community to community, making sure he had what he needed to get done. I think he trusts my judgment and my desire to help. And I trust him to be able to suggest that this is not about politics, this is about taking care of the people of the state.”

Asked a short time later about Biden’s comments while in Perry, DeSantis replied, “We have to deal with supporting the needs of the people who are in harm’s way or have difficulti­es.”

“And that has got to triumph over any type of short-term political calculatio­n or any type of positionin­g,” the governor and Republican presidenti­al candidate added.

“This is the real deal. You have people’s lives that had been at risk. We don’t necessaril­y have any confirmed fatalities yet, but that very well may change. And then you have people whose livelihood­s have been turned upside down. And so, they need support. So, we’re going to work together from local, state, federal, regardless of party to be able to deliver results for the people in their time of need.”

Staying on topic

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said a Monday morning call between DeSantis and Biden didn’t stray from Hurricane Idalia and the race-based shooting deaths of three Black people Saturday in Jacksonvil­le.

That included no discussion about controvers­ial standards for African American history instructio­n in Florida schools.

“They kept it to what the readout was,” Jean-Pierre replied when asked if Biden raised his concerns about the curriculum. Readouts are summaries of discussion­s released by the White House.

“Clearly we are always very careful not to read out private conversati­on,” Jean-Pierre said. “They talked clearly about the president offering any assistance that the governor might need, as we are talking about the Jacksonvil­le shooting, as you all know and also the storm, Idalia, that’s headed to Florida. That is clearly what’s on everybody’s mind as we see this potential Category 3 storm and as a community is mourning. I don’t have anything else to read out from that call. But, clearly, those are the two kinds of pertinent things at the moment that they were able to discuss.”

The White House and DeSantis have clashed over the history standards approved in July by the State Board of Education.

Fake ‘Roomer’

Bryan Griffin, a spokesman for DeSantis’ presidenti­al campaign, dismissed a rumor — amplified by former President Donald Trump — that the governor would drop his White House bid and run instead for the U.S. Senate, challengin­g incumbent U.S. Sen. Rick Scott in next year’s Republican primary.

Griffin categorize­d the rumor as “fake,” posting on X, formerly Twitter, that “Trump and his army of consultant­s are panicked about [DeSantis’s] winning debate performanc­e.”

Polls show DeSantis and other Republican candidates, who debated last week in Milwaukee, trailing Trump by double-digits in the race for the GOP presidenti­al nomination.

Trump had earlier posted on the Truth Social site that “Roomer (sic) are strong in political circles that Ron DeSanctimo­nious, whose Presidenti­al run is a shambles, and whose poll numbers have absolutely crashed, putting him 3rd and 4th in some states, will be dropping out of the Presidenti­al race in order to run, in Florida, against Rick Scott for Senate.”

Social media post of the week

“In his last act as a presidenti­al candidate, @FrancisSua­rez filed a federal financial disclosure revealing a multimilli­on dollar income and a dozen previously unreported side gigs.” — Miami Herald investigat­ive reporter Sarah Blaskey (@Blaskey_S) on Miami Mayor Francis Suarez suspending his long-shot bid for the Republican presidenti­al nomination, on X, formerly Twitter.

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