DeSantis is a total buffoon. He can't even talk to reporters pretending to act like Trump and comes off looking like a clown. Even Floridians in the reddest sections of Florida are now tired of his discrimination and fascist laws against Americans and the education system.
'Barking’: DeSantis mocked as his crew races to protect him from criticism after he attacks reporterContinuing his official presidential campaign kickoff this week, Florida GOP Governor Ron DeSantis delivered a speech to New Hampshire voters Thursday morning but refused to take questions from the audience. Afterward, when a reporter simply asked why, DeSantis blasted him, saying repeatedly, "Are you blind?" because he was talking to individual supporters at the time.
The candidate's campaign team immediately swarmed to protect him on social media.
NBC News senior national political reporter Jonathan Allen on Twitter posted the video (below) and wrote that DeSantis had "lashed out at a reporter for asking him about it while he was chatting with members of the crowd individually."
At NBC News, Allen's headline reads: "Ron DeSantis loses his temper with a reporter: 'Are you blind?'"
Allen reports DeSantis "became noticeably agitated" and "lashed out at a reporter — twice barking 'Are you blind?'"
The reporter who had asked DeSantis why he wouldn't take questions was Steve Peoples, chief political reporter for The Associated Press, who tweeted: "Here in Laconia, NH at his first stop in state as presidential candidate, DeSantis speaks for 58 minutes. He takes no questions from audience."
“People are coming up to me, talking to me,” DeSantis said. “What are you talking about? Are you blind? Are you blind? People are coming up to me, talking to me whatever they want to talk to me about.”
Allen adds that the Florida governor's decision to not take questions "was surprising and frustrating to some Republicans who came to hear DeSantis speak."
On social media, many were also not impressed.
"Some of us warned that DeSantis wasn’t ready for the national media or public spotlight, that he had been coddled in Florida for far too long, and that his media team of Pushaw, Redfern, et al spend too much time trolling on Twitter and not helping him," observed MSNBC's Mehdi Hasan.
But the question really is why wouldn't a candidate for president, who has been in politics for over a decade, be excited to talk to prospective supporters and take their questions, especially given the history of states like New Hampshire and Iowa, where establishing that personal relationship historically has been critical to the success of a candidate's campaign?
Former federal prosecutor, former DeSantis administration official, and former Republican Ron Filipkowski noted, "Ron DeSnowflake lost his cool again and had another freakout. This guy can’t deal with people."
Observing DeSantis is "so out of his depth," former journalist Ed Moltzen writes: "There are towns in New Hampshire with the official title 'Town Moderator' - people who assist with fielding audience questions to political candidates during forums. That’s how much open Q & A is in the political DNA of New Hampshire."
Huffpost White House correspondent S.V. Dáte had warned, "Just watch. DeSantis’ social media arsonists will fan this interaction for days."
And indeed, DeSantis' crew was quick to attack, which Dáte pointed to.
Governor DeSantis' press secretary Bryan Griffin quickly moved to falsely frame the interaction.
"This @AP reporter asked this question while @RonDeSantis was surrounded by voters in New Hampshire asking him questions and taking pictures," Griffin tweeted. "Perfectly illustrative of the modern media shutting their eyes and ears to the truth to push their narrative."
The question was clearly about DeSantis' refusal to take questions from the audience, so the audience could hear his answers.
Christina Pushaw, DeSantis' far-right former press secretary who moved to his presidential campaign as his rapid response director, responded to Griffin to attack the reporter.
"Very diplomatic of you to refer to the AP activist as a reporter!" she said.
But journalist Marcus Baram replied to Griffin: "You KNOW what the reporter meant.
Not a meet-and-greet with lots of people in a crowded room.
Questions asked in a setting where the person has time to ask the governor without distractions, and he has the time to respond with a substantive answer.
Campaigning 101."
Watch DeSantis at this link: https://twitter.com/i/status/1664282718304337923[/b]
'Backlash to the backlash' is seeing reddest parts of Florida rise against DeSantis' right-wing crusadeThe wave of right-wing populism that carried Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-Fla.) to a decisive reelection victory in November appears to have hit a wall.
A Tuesday night school board meeting held in a county DeSantis won handily saw furious teachers, students and parents railing against right-wing efforts to reshape the Sunshine State’s educational system – a clear sign of an emerging “backlash to the backlash, Washington Post columnists Greg Sargent and Paul Waldman wrote Thursday.
“By now, it’s obvious that the reactionary culture warriors who want to reshape American education are inspiring a serious liberal counter-mobilization in response,” Sargent and Waldman write in an opinion piece for The Post published under the headline “In a deep red Florida county, a student-teacher revolt shames the right.”
“Remarkably, this backlash to the backlash is gaining momentum in some of the reddest parts of the country.”
The meeting was held in Hernando County, which DeSantis won by 41 points, and which has become the focus of national media attention after fifth-grade teacher Jenna Barbee showed her class the Disney film “Strange World,” which features an openly gay character.
The Florida Department of Education is investigating Barbee over whether she violated the state’s new “don’t say gay” law that bans instruction about gender identity and sexual orientation.
Sargent and Waldman write that “The scene featured teachers pointedly declaring that right-wing attacks are driving them to quit, even as parents and students forcefully stood up on their behalf, demanding a halt to the hysteria.”
Barbee is resigning from the Hernando County School District and she isn’t alone, according to the report.
“No one is teaching your kids to be gay,” Alyssa Marano, a math teacher who has resigned from the district, said at Tuesday’s meeting.
“Sometimes, they just are gay. I have math to teach. I literally don’t have time to teach your kids to be gay.”
Sargent and Waldman write that “the real story of the night was the response. Again and again, parents and students forcefully defended teachers. They cast the right’s attacks, the censoring of educators and the removal of books as the real threats to education.”
“War on woke?” one student said. “More like war on your children’s future.”
Sarah Jones writes for New York Magazine that the blowback to far-right efforts to shape education seen at the Hernando County district are happening throughout the country, as “liberal parents in states as far-flung as New York, North Carolina and Montana are organizing local groups, pressuring school boards and running for office to challenge the right’s education takeover.”
“Just as a car wreck commands attention, the ugliness of right-wing culture-warring often transfixes the news media,” Sargent and Waldman write.
“But another story is beckoning: Ordinary parents everywhere and their elected representatives are responding, and declaring that they’ve had enough.”
Read the full article here: https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2023/06/01/hernando-county-ron-desantis-book-bans-democratic-governors/