Coco Gauff, the reigning U.S. Open champion who’s considered a favorite at the French Open tournament that begins this weekend, told The Associated Press in an interview that right now is “a crazy time to be a Floridian, especially a Black one at that.”
The 20-year-old tennis superstar, who used her interview to encourage people to vote, said, “We aren’t happy with the current state of our government in Florida.”
As a state senator who represents Miami Gardens, Florida’s largest majority-Black city, I applaud Gauff for standing up and speaking out against the state’s open hostility toward Black Americans. In Ron DeSantis’ Florida, Black people (and people of color, more generally) are absolutely less safe. So much so that the NAACP last summer issued an official travel advisory noting the state’s targeted animosity toward Black people and advising Black people not to visit our state.
“Please be advised,” the NAACP advisory read, “that Florida is openly hostile toward African Americans, people of color and LGBTQ+ individuals. Before traveling to Florida, please understand that the State of Florida devalues and marginalizes the contributions of and the challenges faced by African Americans and other minorities.”
Months after the NAACP’s travel advisory, Alpha Phi Alpha, the nation’s oldest historically Black college fraternity, and of which I am a member, announced that it was pulling its 2025 general convention out of Florida.
A spokesperson for DeSantis immediately dismissed NAACP’s advisory as “nothing more than a stunt.” When his office was asked for a response to Gauff’s comment that it’s a bad time to be Black and in Florida, the governor’s office declined to address it directly and said, instead, that Florida is “thriving.”
I respectfully disagree. How are we thriving when people who have lived here for decades are being priced out? How are we thriving when parents are forced to work three or four jobs just to put food on the table? Are we really thriving when countless residents are unjustly targeted based on their identity?
DeSantis and the members of his administration ought to find it deeply distressing to hear statements rightfully pointing out concerns for safety from such prominent individuals and organizations. But rather than sparing a moment for introspection, they ignore the situation of their own creation and claim no such issue exists.
DeSantis ought to find it deeply distressing to hear statements rightfully pointing out concerns for safety from such prominent individuals and organizations.
Gauff and the NAACP aren’t the only ones who have sounded the alarm on Florida. Travel advisories similar to the one the NAACP released have been issued by groups that include the Human Rights Campaign, which advocates for LGBTQ people, the League of United Latin American Citizens, Equality Florida and the Florida Immigrant Coalition. Retired Miami Heat champion Dwyane Wade and his wife, acclaimed actress Gabrielle Union, are raising a trans daughter, and they, quite understandably, left our state after DeSantis’ attacks on the LGBTQ community. Wade said they left for California “for a lot of reasons,” but, “one of our decisions was what was going to be the safest and best community for our daughter, Zaya.”
He loves Miami, Wade said last year, “but the last couple of years, the laws, the politics, you know, has really become this big conversation, right? It’s unsafe conversation, and it’s unsafe for my daughter, it’s unsafe for the young kids and the youth and adults, the elder in the trans community. And so for us, as much as I love that city, as much as I’m always going to be a part of it, for the safety of my family, that’s what it was. I couldn’t move back.” DeSantis said nothing in response.









