By Andrew Trunsky
Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed an executive order scrapping all COVID-19 restrictions throughout the state and an accompanying bill that limits localities’ ability to enforce emergency precautions.
“I think that’s the evidence-based thing to do,” DeSantis said during a press conference Monday announcing the executive order. “I think folks that are saying they need to be policing people—at this point, if you’re saying that, then you’re really saying you don’t believe in the vaccines.”
DeSantis signed SB 2006, which says that any emergency orders can last no longer than six weeks. It gives him the authority to overrule cities that adopt restrictions deemed too harsh or unnecessary, and gives city and county commissions the power to overrule mayors.
It also gives the state Legislature the power to overrule any restrictions the governor enforces, which DeSantis touted as a check on any future Democratic governor who enforces rules the GOP Legislature opposes. While businesses can still mandate masks if they choose to, local governments cannot, under the law.
“I think the Legislature looked and said, ‘Well, OK, what if we were in a California situation?’” DeSantis said, touching on the Democratic state’s array of coronavirus restrictions in place. “What would the Legislature’s ability to be? And so they put safeguards for the people of Florida.”
Democrats, however, attacked the bill, alleging hypocrisy given Republicans’ seeming support of limited government and criticizing DeSantis’ leadership throughout the pandemic.
“The executive order he just signed to is just so hypocritical to the so-called values of the party of small government,” said Democratic state Rep. Anna Eskamani, according to the Orlando Sentinel. “It was local governments that led the way in protecting their people and putting into play standards that helped to stop the spread of COVID-19 … It really is so important that every government agency at every level work together to solve these problems, not continue to demonize [local] governments.”
“To be clear, cities like St. Pete, Tampa, Orlando, Miami, and Miami Beach saved Florida and the governor’s behind throughout this pandemic,” St. Petersburg Mayor Rick Kriseman said on Twitter. “Can you imagine if each city had been led by Ron DeSantis? How many lives would have been lost? What would our economy look like today?”
The bill also prohibits businesses from requiring “vaccine passports,” building on an earlier executive order DeSantis signed in April.
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Gov. Scott has treated the entire state of Vermont as if each and every one of us were bedridden in a nursing home and thus in the gravest danger. As a result, Vermont has the second lowest herd immunity rate in the country. Gov. DeSantis brought in the finest, non-governmental epidemiologists to advise him. We should encourage Vermonters to travel to Florida so they can taste normal life without hypochondriacal fear and snap out of this morbid spell.
It’s rubbish to say that St. Pete, Tampa, etc. saved Florida. The plain fact is that the virus is going to do what it’s going to do, according to Farr’s law.
Sweden is an example of what would’ve happened if Florida had very modest restrictions, no mask mandate, and no police state: essentially that same thing that happened all over Europe and the US. The virus does what it does. There is no exponential growth. We knew that then but denied it in order to frighten everyone.
People aren’t stupid and will taken proper measures according to the perceived danger. Because of this, there was never any need for any medical police state to ensure that people were following rules, and to beat up on them if they weren’t. The danger of a medical police state to our liberty and to our well-being and to the well-being of our great-grandchildren far outweighs the danger to society if a few people don’t do exactly what others expect of them in response to a disease outbreak. We see now in Florida and Texas and other states that these mandates don’t matter.
I’m so sick of Vermont and these continued restrictions and this pervasive aura of fear over a relatively minor virus that can be handled with simple medications, that I’d move to Florida in a heartbeat if it were as easy as just wishing it. Florida, and freedom, are calling me.