When I first saw some reporting yesterday about Sen. Rick Scott urging radicals to steer clear of Florida, I was encouraged. There have been some neo-Nazi gatherings in the state recently, and my hope was that the Republican senator had issued a message telling these dangerous extremists that they’re not welcome in Florida.
Unfortunately, that’s not quite what happened. Scott did issue a 35-second statement, but the GOP lawmaker had a different audience in mind.
“Sen. Rick Scott here. Let me give you a travel warning: If you’re a socialist, communist, somebody who believes in big government, I would think twice, think twice, if you’re thinking about taking a vacation or moving to Florida. We’re the free state of Florida. We actually don’t believe in socialism. … We like freedom, liberty, capitalism, things like that.”
The odd video was distributed by way of social media — and it was, naturally, soon followed by an accompanying fundraising pitch.
I’m warning socialists and communists not to travel to Florida. They are not welcome in the Sunshine State.pic.twitter.com/ZB4RVz6XdK
— Rick Scott (@ScottforFlorida) June 27, 2023
If this sounds at all familiar, it’s not your imagination. With Florida Republicans having imposed a series of regressive restrictions on civil liberties, a variety of prominent national organizations have warned their members about conditions in the Sunshine State. As a Daily Beast report noted, actual travel advisories have been issued by “the NAACP, League of United Latin American Citizens, Equality Florida, Florida Immigrant Coalition, and the Human Rights Campaign—the nation’s largest LGBTQ+ advocacy group. The organizations have declared a state of emergency for Black Americans, immigrants, and LGBTQ+ individuals in Florida, citing Gov. Ron DeSantis’ aggressive campaign of anti-trans laws, a harsh new law on undocumented immigrants, and book bans.”
With this in mind, Scott’s video was intended as sarcasm. National organizations are warning their membership about Florida’s increasingly toxic political environment? Fine, the senator said. He’d warn proponents of “big government” that they’re not welcome in the Sunshine State anyway.
He delivered a similar message last month, though yesterday’s message went further, and as such, generated more attention.
There are plenty of obvious problems with the senator’s ugly pitch. It’s inherently strange, for example, to see a statewide officeholder, representing many constituents who rely on tourism, publicly encouraging people not to even visit his own home state. It’s just as bizarre for a senator, who presumably knows better, to lump together socialists, communists, those who believe in “big government,” as if the labels were effectively interchangeable.








