2024 Republican candidate Scott decries Florida's new Black history plan
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[July 29, 2023]
By James Oliphant
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. Senator Tim Scott, the highest-profile Black
candidate in the 2024 Republican presidential race, has blasted his
rival Ron DeSantis, Florida's governor, over the state's newly adopted
Black history curriculum, saying "there's no silver lining" in slavery.
Scott joined a growing chorus of critics of Florida's new standards that
require public school students to be taught that some slaves developed
skills that "could be applied for their personal benefit." DeSantis has
defended the guidelines and accused opponents of siding with Democrats
on the issue.
Asked about the curriculum at a campaign stop in Iowa on Thursday, Scott
told reporters, "Any benefits that people suggest you had during
slavery, you would have had as a free person," according to video posted
on messaging platform X, formerly known as Twitter.
"What slavery was really about was separating families, about mutilating
humans and even raping their wives. It was just devastating," Scott
said.
Without naming DeSantis, Scott said he hoped that every candidate in the
Republican field "would appreciate that."
Scott's remarks came after another prominent Black Republican, U.S.
Representative Byron Donalds of Florida, also criticized the new
standards. That triggered outraged pushback from DeSantis' campaign
online, which suggested Donalds was a supporter of Democrat Kamala
Harris, the first Black vice president.
Harris last week delivered a fierce rebuke of DeSantis and the history
curriculum while on a trip to Florida. Donalds, a rising star in the
Republican party, endorsed former President Donald Trump over DeSantis
in April.
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Republican presidential candidate U.S.
Senator Tim Scott (R-SC) is reflected in a mirror while speaking at
a campaign town hall meeting in Salem, New Hampshire, U.S., July 18,
2023. REUTERS/Brian Snyder/File Photo
On Friday, another Republican Black U.S. representative, John James,
blasted DeSantis over the curriculum as well as his criticism of
fellow Black Republicans.
"There are only five black Republicans in Congress and you're
attacking two of them," James posted on X. "You've gone too far.
Stop."
The backlash comes when the Republican Party is looking to take
advantage of President Joe Biden's middling approval ratings and
make new inroads with Black and other voters of color in next year's
general election - voters with whom the party has traditionally
struggled.
DeSantis has argued that he is the most electable Republican in the
field because he won over swing voters, including large numbers of
Latinos, in his gubernatorial re-election victory last year.
The Florida Board of Education, whose members are appointed by the
governor, adopted the new standards after the state legislature last
year passed a law at DeSantis' urging that required discussions
about race be taught in an "objective" manner.
(Reporting by James Oliphant; additional reporting by Gram Slattery
and Alexandra Ulmer; editing by Ross Colvin, Richard Chang and
Leslie Adler)
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