Speaking at the Conservative Political Action Conference on Thursday afternoon, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis articulated his clearest presidential pitch to date in a whirlwind speech arguing that “Florida has defeated Faucism.”
The remarks, which were delivered at the most influential Republican activist gathering in the country, serve as a preview of the major themes DeSantis could run on if he does, indeed, make a widely expected 2024 bid. And the heart of that message was that under his leadership Florida has served as a “citadel of freedom” in what he sees as an authoritarian hellscape that uses the pretext of Covid to brutally repress people.
DeSantis hopes to exploit anti-Covid restriction hysteria to propel himself to greater heights.
Nowhere in DeSantis’ analysis was any reckoning or remorse over his state’s poor record on Covid-related mortality and illness. Nor was there acknowledgment of the fact that Covid restrictions in the U.S., which were measured and largely comparable to or more relaxed than many of our peer countries, are already vanishing. Instead, DeSantis hopes to exploit anti-Covid restriction hysteria to propel himself to greater heights and convince the GOP that he’s the man of the moment.
DeSantis’ speech covered a great deal of ground very quickly, including calling for cracking down on crime harshly, securing borders more aggressively, bigger obstacles to voting in the name of election security, combating “Bidenflation” and decrying “woke” thinking as “the new religion of the left.” DeSantis dutifully ticked all the boxes that any Trumpian right-wing populist needs to tick to excite the base, including attacking the media as “dishonest.” His delivery was a sort of soggy mimicry of Donald Trump, rushed and with a slightly cerebral air that belied his anti-intellectual pandering.
But DeSantis’ message was centered on boasting about how he governed his state during the pandemic. He championed his controversial bans on Covid-related restrictions and mandates (which have included remarkably punitive policies like seeking to strip funding from Democratic counties that bucked his prohibitions on mask requirements in schools) and painted his state’s radically lax Covid policies as a fortress against a “Faucian dystopia where people’s freedoms are curtailed and their livelihoods are destroyed” and the tyranny of the “biomedical security state.”








