Stephens: Liberals for Ron DeSantis

In this May 14, 2020, file photo, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks at a news conference in Doral, Fla. DeSantis is extending the state's voter registration deadline that expired Monday, Oct. 5 until 7 p.m. EDT Tuesday, Oct. 6 after heavy traffic crashed the state's online system and potentially prevented thousands of enrolling to cast ballots in next month's presidential election. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky, File)
In this May 14, 2020, file photo, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks at a news conference in Doral, Fla. DeSantis is extending the state's voter registration deadline that expired Monday, Oct. 5 until 7 p.m. EDT Tuesday, Oct. 6 after heavy traffic crashed the state's online system and potentially prevented thousands of enrolling to cast ballots in next month's presidential election. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky, File)

To understand how Ron DeSantis last week became the apparent front-runner for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination - and how the liberal media helped the Florida governor get there - watch the video of his March 22 encounter with "60 Minutes" reporter Sharyn Alfonsi.

Or rather, watch two videos. In the unedited video, DeSantis provides a detailed rebuttal to Alfonsi's allegation that he engaged in a pay-to-play scheme with the supermarket chain Publix, trading a $100,000 campaign donation in exchange for exclusive vaccination distribution rights in Palm Beach County.

"The first pharmacies that had" the vaccine "were CVS and Walgreens, and they had a long-term care mission," DeSantis explained, adding that, according to county officials, "90% of their seniors live within a mile and a half of a Publix." He concluded, "We're also now very much expanding CVS and Walgreens, now that they've completed their long-term care mission."

Not one of these quotes was included in the "60 Minutes" version, which is edited to make the governor appear dismissive and nonresponsive to Alfonsi's allegation. Nor did "60 Minutes" mention that the decision to use Publix was made not by the governor but rather by the Florida Division of Emergency Management, whose director, Jared Moskowitz, is a Democrat. Moskowitz warned "60 Minutes" in advance of the story that "this Publix narrative was malarkey."

For as long as I've been politically sentient, I've marveled at the mainstream media's talent for giving Republican politicians a boost - always unwittingly. Donald Trump got an estimated $2 billion worth of free media by March 2016, including from TV hosts who would later deliver impassioned soliloquies about how they despised him.

Before Trump, a 2015 story about Marco Rubio's personal spending, including for a "luxury speedboat," deflated when the boat in question turned out to be a modest fishing boat with a pair of outboard engines. The Florida senator never got the GOP presidential nomination but handily won re-election. A 2004 CBS News hit job on George W. Bush based on unverified documents helped lift the incumbent president's re-election campaign.

In 1987, Newsweek tarred then-Vice President George H.W. Bush with "the Wimp Factor." It was a dumb thing to say about a former Navy pilot who had been shot down in combat, especially when his political opponent turned out to be the haplessly helmeted Mike Dukakis.

Now these same media gods have decided to anoint DeSantis with the priceless gift of liberal misunderestimation - that combination of intellectual condescension and moralistic thunder that does so much to enrage, and therefore animate, conservative-leaning voters.

Last year DeSantis was supposed to be the governor who was doing everything wrong on COVID-19, like refusing to impose a mask mandate, while Andrew Cuomo was the governor supposedly doing everything right. "Florida Man Leads His State to the Morgue" was the title of one especially sneering piece in The New Republic.

Except that Florida, the state with the second-highest percentage of elderly people (20.5%), has a COVID fatality rate of 158 for every 100,000 residents, compared to New York's 260, with DeSantis focusing on protecting nursing homes while Cuomo did the opposite. Florida also got school openings right, despite The New Republic having likened his approach to the pandemic to a "death march."

None of this means DeSantis got everything right with the pandemic: Florida's overall COVID record, as The Atlantic's Derek Thompson points out, has been a mixed bag. But the left's anti-DeSantis fetish turned his every nondisaster into a public-relations victory.

DeSantis' latest crusade is against so-called vaccine passports, an idea pitting medical expediency against basic personal rights. Let's see what kind of scorn gets poured on him for this one. Politicians win when they become lucky in the enemies they make. DeSantis has certainly been fortunate in his.

The New York Times

Upcoming Events