Florida lawmakers back DeSantis on transporting migrants, policing
elections
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[February 11, 2023]
By Joseph Ax
(Reuters) -Florida's legislature on Friday voted to expand Governor Ron
DeSantis' controversial effort to relocate migrants anywhere in the
United States and bolster his election police force, backing some of the
Republican's top priorities ahead of a widely anticipated 2024 White
House campaign.
The Republican-controlled House of Representatives approved the
legislation along party lines. Both bills, which passed the
Republican-majority Senate on Wednesday, will now head to DeSantis' desk
for his signature.
State lawmakers are holding a special session to advance several bills
at the urging of DeSantis, who has built a national profile by stoking
conservative anger as he weighs challenging former President Donald
Trump for next year's Republican presidential nomination.
Last year, DeSantis used taxpayer money to fly dozens of South American
migrants from Texas to the wealthy enclave of Martha's Vineyard,
Massachusetts, saying he was responding to the federal government's
failed immigration policies.
The move – decried as a political stunt by Democrats and advocates for
immigrants – raised legal questions because none of the migrants had
been in Florida. Democratic state Senator Jason Pizzo has sued DeSantis
as a private citizen, claiming the governor misused taxpayer money.
Friday's migrants bill would explicitly allow DeSantis to transport
migrants from anywhere in the country. It also says money spent on
flights in the past is "deemed approved," which could help defend the
governor against claims of misuse.
Democrats, citing allegations that some of the migrants were misled,
said the program uses vulnerable people as political props.
"This bill is indefensible," Representative Christopher Benjamin said on
the state House floor. "Stop playing games with people's lives."
Republicans said the bill will help migrants who wish to travel to
so-called sanctuary cities voluntarily.
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Republican Florida Governor Ron DeSantis
speaks as he celebrates onstage during his 2022 U.S. midterm
elections night party in Tampa, Florida, U.S., November 8, 2022.
REUTERS/Marco Bello
"They're going to get more benefits in a sanctuary state or city
than they would here, and we're simply providing them with a free
ticket," Representative Juan Fernandez-Barquin said.
Republican lawmakers also approved a bill strengthening DeSantis'
election police force, which was created last year in the wake of
former President Donald Trump's false claims that the 2020 election
was stolen.
DeSantis announced the first 20 arrests by the Office of Election
Crimes and Security in August, but some charges have been dismissed
due to jurisdictional issues. The new bill is intended to fix that
problem by specifically granting the statewide prosecutor the
authority to pursue such cases.
Republicans have defended the law as a way of ensuring election
integrity. Democrats said the bill would intimidate voters of color
in the name of addressing a problem that does not exist. Voter fraud
is extremely rare in the United States, studies have shown.
Also at DeSantis' urging, lawmakers on Friday approved legislation
to give him control of Walt Disney World's special self-governing
district, a measure aimed at punishing the company for its
opposition last year to a DeSantis-backed bill barring the teaching
of gender identity concepts to young children in school. Critics
have labeled it the "don't say gay" law.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Editing by Colleen Jenkins, Jonathan Oatis
and Chizu Nomiyama)
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