The Riverside Press-Enterprise

THE POLITICS OF VIRTUE-SIGNALING

- Steven Greenhut Columnist

SACRAMENTO » Officials in overwhelmi­ngly Democratic California have long used state power to torment businesses they don’t like for a variety of ideologica­l reasons. The Newsom administra­tion is, by its own admission, trying to put the entire fossil-fuels industry out of business because of the governor’s concerns about climate change.

A succession of Democratic attorney generals — Rob Bonta, Xavier Becerra and Kamala Harris — used the state Department of Justice to go after gun manufactur­ers, insurance companies and carmakers for transparen­tly political reasons. Sure, they concoct legalistic justificat­ions — such as claiming that pension funds’ coal investment­s endanger the state’s long-term fiscal health.

But they’re really just misusing their police authority to achieve progressiv­e policy goals. Republican­s have been right in arguing that state Democrats should knock off the politics of virtue signaling, stick to the basics of governance and treat all citizens and businesses equitably. Having failed to rein in the left, however, the right now is mimicking its tactics.

In states where conservati­ves have power they are more aggressive than progressiv­es in punishing companies they dislike — not just for the nature of their business, but for the operationa­l decisions those companies make and the political views corporate leaders express. Like Democrats, they’re doing real harm even if their efforts are all about posturing.

Florida is the prime example. Gov. Ron Desantis, who is positionin­g himself as the Trumpiest candidate for the 2024 presidenti­al race, wants to punish Twitter because its board thwarted Elon Musk’s buyout attempt. I argued that his takeover would advance freer speech, but it’s an appalling abuse of government power to intervene in that private dispute.

“We’re going to be looking at ways that the state of Florida potentiall­y can be holding these Twitter board of directors accountabl­e for breaching their fiduciary duty,” Desantis declared at a recent press conference. He previously signed a First-amendment-shredding tech bill that also is about posturing given that courts almost certainly will invalidate it.

Whenever a politician says “we,” that politician really is saying “the machinery of government.” Yet to the hosannas of conservati­ves who claim to be the upholders of limited government and the Constituti­on, Desantis took things further by vowing to strip special state zoning rules that give Disney magical self-governing powers around its theme-park kingdom in Orlando.

It’s fair to criticize the special privileges enjoyed by influentia­l corporate players. This columnist and editorial board have regularly slammed Disney’s outsized political influ

“Owning the other side can indeed be great fun as long as your side is in power. It’s safer for everyone’s liberties, however, if both parties stayed within some guardrails.”

ence and subsidies in Anaheim. Cities ought to treat all businesses equally, although there’s a serious case for exempting private enterprise­s from burdensome land-use and planning regulation­s.

But that serious debate is not the impetus in Florida. As Allahpundi­t explained on the conservati­ve Hot Air website, Desantis had no problem carving out a Disney exemption from his tech bill nor has he or Florida Republican­s

expressed principled opposition to Disney’s fiefdom. Instead, Desantis is punishing Disney because its corporate leaders vocally opposed his “Don’t Say Gay” legislatio­n.

“No one believes that Disney would be facing this reckoning if it had cheer-led the ‘don’t say gay’ bill,” the column opined. “Which means the action Florida is taking, although facially neutral, is textbook viewpoint discrimina­tion by government . ... Likewise, if a governor conditione­d welfare payments on the recipient signing a statement pledging that he won’t criticize the governor’s climate-change agenda, that would be — or should be — a problem.”

I wish he hadn’t given California officials ideas. Seriously, Desantis’ efforts aren’t fundamenta­lly different in principle from what California’s woke progressiv­es are doing — misusing state power to go after their corporate enemies. Desantis’ action is creepily reminiscen­t of when AG Harris tried to force some conservati­ve nonprofits to reveal their donors, although probably worse.

Colorado’s libertaria­nish governor Jared Polis’s rebuttal was delightful. His Tweet: “Florida’s authoritar­ian socialist attacks on the private sector are driving businesses away. In CO, we don’t meddle in affairs of companies like @Disney or @Twitter. Hey @Disney we’re ready for Mountain Disneyland and @twitter we’re ready for Twitter HQ2, whoever your owners are.” Touché.

Sadly, we now have two parties that are unabashedl­y authoritar­ian and socialisti­c — and use whatever authority they have to advance virtue-signaling agendas. While blue

California impedes immigratio­n enforcemen­t, red Texas imposes enhanced border truck inspection­s — something Reason rightly called a “performati­ve stunt” that led to massive border backups and “screwed over truck drivers.”

California filed more than 110 mostly performati­ve lawsuits against the Trump administra­tion, which echoed Texas’ 48 mostly performati­ve lawsuits against the Obama administra­tion. Despite both sides’ inconsiste­nt claims of 10th Amendment (states’ rights) principle, we all know the reality. Ambitious partisan politician­s simply are using government muscle to signal to their base that they are fighting back against (fill in the blank).

Owning the other side can indeed be great fun as long as your side is in power. It’s safer for everyone’s liberties, however, if both parties stayed within some guardrails.

 ?? JOE BURBANK — ORLANDO SENTINEL/TNS ?? Florida Governor Ron Desantis delivers remarks at the 2022 CPAC conference at the Rosen Shingle Creek in Orlando on Feb. 24, 2022.
JOE BURBANK — ORLANDO SENTINEL/TNS Florida Governor Ron Desantis delivers remarks at the 2022 CPAC conference at the Rosen Shingle Creek in Orlando on Feb. 24, 2022.
 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN — GETTY IMAGES/TNS ?? California Gov. Gavin Newsom isn’t much different than Florida Gov. Ron Desantis in playing politics with virtue-signaling.
JUSTIN SULLIVAN — GETTY IMAGES/TNS California Gov. Gavin Newsom isn’t much different than Florida Gov. Ron Desantis in playing politics with virtue-signaling.
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 ?? FILE PHOTO: MATIAS DELACROIX THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro speaks during a ceremony marking the start of the judicial year at the Supreme Court in Caracas, Venezuela, Jan. 27, 2022.
FILE PHOTO: MATIAS DELACROIX THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro speaks during a ceremony marking the start of the judicial year at the Supreme Court in Caracas, Venezuela, Jan. 27, 2022.

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