Posted on 04/22/2022 2:57:02 PM PDT by Joe Brower
GOP lesson: DeSantis deployed states’ rights, and his popularity soared.
Rod Thomson
4/21/2022
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis won in 2018 over Andrew Gillum by 32,000 votes, or four-tenths of one percentage point. Very, very close in a big purple state. Since that victory, DeSantis has endured relentless attacks on every conceivable issue, non-issue and fake issue.
National outlets such as 60 Minutes and state publications in every market gaslit and flat-out lied about DeSantis, from Covid deaths to transgenderism in schools to the fictional “don’t say gay” bill. Late-night former comedians, Hollywooders, corporate cowards and the White House have all singled out DeSantis for vilification for years now. “DeathSantis” has trended on the media message board Twitter repeatedly.
And yet, three years later DeSantis has dramatically increased his popularity in Florida, as have Republicans in general if voter registration means anything. A recent St. Pete Poll conducted for Florida Politics, both left of center outfits, found Governor DeSantis with a plus-16 point approval rating — 54% to 38% of registered voters.
Further, a recent University of North Florida poll of registered Florida voters found giant margins for DeSantis over either of his Democrat contenders. He leads former Governor and party flip-flopper Charlie Crist by 19 points and Florida Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried by 21 points. Those numbers will close by November, of course. But the poll was of registered voters, which is not as good for Republicans typically as super voters. And DeSantis has nearly $100 million for re-election while his contenders each have a few million and a primary yet.
How is this stunning success in popularity among ordinary voters possible when every conceivable media, social media and cultural mover has vilified DeSantis for three years?
In a word: Interposition.
This is the states’ rights idea that any state in a federation such as the United States has a right and the authority to interpose itself between an overbearing federal government and the state. The Constitution is riddled with its implications in the separation of powers between the federal government and state governments. The Federalist Papers discuss it. It was an essential element of states rights federalism and used previous to the Civil War. That terrible conflagration became inevitable to rid the nation of the moral scourge of slavery, but the price was a rolling forth of power consolidating in Washington, D.C. at the cost of the states.
However, it’s not like interposition was ever outlawed. States could still practice it, but that requires spinal fortitude. And this fundamental states’ right now more than ever.
Never using the term “interposition” publicly, DeSantis nevertheless practiced this essential concept repeatedly during Covid. He stood between a federal shutdown and shutting down Florida. Even the three-week Florida “shutdown” was minimal as the list of who could remain open, including churches, was very long. He blocked the federal government from mandating shots in Florida, even keeping corporations from acting as fronts to enforce the mandates. When the federal government curtailed Florida’s access to monoclonals for what appeared to be petty personal reasons, DeSantis bypassed the federal stock and bought monoclonals on the open market.
Even in the latest kerfuffle over the Parental Rights in Education bill there is a form of interposition by the Republican Legislature and DeSantis because the U.S. Department of Education holds so much (extra-constitutional) leverage over school districts, and they have created a state legal bulwark against federal infringement.
Most recently, DeSantis challenged his own party leadership in the Legislature over long-time gerrymandered Congressional boundaries to provide a black district in North Florida. Legislative Republicans kept the district similar to what it had been, which also had the side-benefit of clumping a lot of Democrats into one district. DeSantis believes drawing districts based on race is openly unconstitutional. This is the sort of principled stand that wrong-foots so many in the political world, but is often appreciated by voters. More Republicans should understand this.
Naturally, the media lost its mind at every one of these actions, but the policies were relatively popular among Floridians. The fact that they have proven to be right in hindsight by the data is awesome for Floridians, but not the first point. The first point is that a state Governor had the kahonas to place himself and the authority of his state government between the federal government and the people of his state, executing this still-standing states’ right.
Every Republican Governor should take note, because blue states have practiced this with less popular policies, such as sanctuary states and cities. It’s the way a federalist government is to work. Time for GOP state leaders to see it and step up. They have a template.
There are two other key lessons for Republicans everywhere in the way DeSantis’ popularity has thrived while under constant elitist assaults.
- Know what you believe and why, and be ready and willing to defend it. Principles may not matter with a lot of politicians and government statists, but they still matter with voters. Take note.
- Do not shrink from confrontation, particularly with the media, but not with any other entity either. Obviously the Republican base loves to see its leaders punch back. Pugilistic President Trump made that clear, and DeSantis has done plenty of it himself, albeit in a different style. Based on polls, the appreciation of a Governor standing up for the rank-and-file residents of a state is also popular.
DeSantis may be the most visible and forward in this respect, but he is not the only one. Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds comes to mind as acting similarly in a different personality. And while Texas Governor Greg Abbott has been a disappointment, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has interposed his office repeatedly in lawsuits, the most recent of which was against the Biden Administration’s mask mandates for airlines and airports in Texas.
This sort of Republican leadership is a no-squish zone. And that is where we live now. The old, rollover, play nice Republicans — you know who you are, Mitt Romney — who get bulldozed by Democrats and fear the media chattering classes, no longer work or are wanted by the voters.
Rod Thomson is an author, former journalist, past Salem radio host and ABC TV commentator and Founder of The Thomson Group. Follow him on Instagram. Contact him at rod@thomsonpr.com.
Too bad the GOP is too retarded to get how important states rights are to many voters.
Excellent!
Keyword phrase: “However, it’s not like interposition was ever outlawed. States could still practice it, but that requires spinal fortitude. And this fundamental states’ right now more than ever.”
Federal courts have consistently ruled that states are sovereigns. It is entirely within the state’s sovereign power to challenge illegal diktats by the federal government.
As the above phrase states: “that requires spinal fortitude.” This reflects what federal judges have stated in various court cases concerning sovereignty: If you want to keep your sovereignty, you must exercise it.
The governor of Florida has done a great job in asserting the state of Florida’s sovereignty.
Bump!
The word is cohones, not Kahonas, the word the author uses. Even cohones is not entirely right. It is an English rendering of the Spanish word cojones, which is the Spanish word for testicles. Cohones is what English speakers hear when Spanish speakers say cojones.
Are any of the linguini spined republican governors learning any lessons from this?
aaaaaaannnddd this has been this freeper’s consistent argument against our governor running for POTUS.
The penultimate battle right now is States rights verses overreaching fedgov. Take back your blue State and join the fight.
The final battle is not one we’re prepared for, or have the fortitude to fight. Yet.
...that is all
Great article! I loved reading this analysis.
Federal courts have consistently ruled that states are sovereigns. It is entirely within the state’s sovereign power to challenge illegal diktats by the federal government.
______________________________________________________
I’m not trying to be a wise guy, but if you have to ask someone else if you can avoid a diktat, then you aren’t really sovereign. States challenged Obamacare and gay-marriage only to have 5 people on the Supreme Court say “Nah...sorry.”
We like it when a Republican actually does something courageous and defies the insane left.
Absolutely Great Article!
Two points stand out:
1. Republican Candidates henceforth must stand up and FIRE BACK with vigor at the Press on specific issues. Lauren Boebert, Marjorie Green, Matt Gaetz are 3 that come to mind.
2. YOU MUST have your own beliefs and know what YOU want and no more rubber spines!
“GOP lesson: DeSantis deployed states’ rights, and his popularity soared.”
Screw that, there are no more “states’ rights”, it’s only federal government rights now. We might as well get use to that, thanks to our ‘courts’.
As to DeSantis, what he did do was deploy PARENTAL RIGHTS, and thus it was a no-brainer that he became a legend.
Just flies over your head. Zoooom!
“Screw that, there are no more “states’ rights”, it’s only federal government rights now. We might as well get used to that, thanks to our ‘courts’.
As to DeSantis, what he did do was deploy PARENTAL RIGHTS, and thus it was a no-brainer that he became a legend.”
DeSantis’resume includes having been a military man, and also being a lawyer. Thus he has been well positioned to not only fight from a FL’s states rights point of view, but he also knows how to fight within the legal system and clearly present his state’s social value rights point of view, along with the legal and constitutional basis for taking legislative action.
`He is a doer, not just a thinker, and it is his unique character traits, innate intelligence, his incredible tenaciousness and an ability to build coalitions and gather political unity to accomplish political ends, that so fully benefits Floridians and their well-being.
It is not just a “no-brainer that he became a legend”. It is the full force of DeSantis himself that has allowed for his getting things done with incredible speed. He is a force of nature and I hate to think that his huge contributions to our political discourse through his conservative administrative actions be demeaned in any way. He is my Governor and my personal political hero.
Interesting - bump for later...
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