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DeSantis appointee resigns from Disney World oversight board

ORLANDO, Fla. — Michael Sasso, a Central Florida attorney, has resigned from Gov. Ron DeSantis’ Disney World governing board he joined earlier this year. Sasso was one of five members of the Central Florida Tourism Oversight District’s Board of Supervisors, the governor-appointed board at the center of DeSantis’ dispute with Disney. Sasso has not publicly given a reason for his resignation. On Tuesday, DeSantis elevated his wife, Meredith Sasso, to the Florida Supreme Court. She was the chief judge of the Sixth District Circuit Court of Appeal. Spectrum News 13first reported Sasso’s resignatio...

DeSantis slammed by former high-level FBI official after declaring how he would treat bureau’s independence

Florida's Republican Governor Ron DeSantis is under fresh fire after launching his presidential campaign and declaring he believes the Federal Bureau of Investigation and even the U.S. Dept. of Justice are not "independent" agencies, and they should be subject to the scrutiny of the President of the United States.

After disgraced GOP President Richard Nixon left office, a virtual wall between the White House and the U.S. Dept. of Justice, including especially the FBI, was created to prevent turning the chief law enforcement agencies of the federal government into political, partisan tools to do the bidding of the nation's chief executive and Commander-in Chief.

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Chicago kids ‘more likely to get shot’ than get a good education: DeSantis

Ron DeSantis on Friday blasted big city progressives and public education, claiming that Chicago children are “more likely to get shot” than receive a good education, The New York Post reported.

The Florida governor, in his first speech since announcing his candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination on Wednesday, linked his attacks on big cities and public education to the pandemic, noting the impact of widespread school closures.

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'Ridiculous poem hoax': DeSantis dismisses criticism over Amanda Gorman poetry ban

Ron DeSantis on Friday appeared to side with a parent with ties to an extremist group that promotes violence who was behind an elementary school's ban of a book by National Youth Poet Laureate Amanda Gorman.

The Florida governor, who on Wednesday announced his candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination, appeared to support Daily Salinas, whose complaint led a Florida public school to restrict access to The Hill We Climb,” a book adaptation of the poem Gorman recited at President Joe Biden’s inauguration.

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Former top FBI official slams DeSantis after declaring he’d fire the director 'on day one'

Florida’s Republican Governor Ron DeSantis is under fresh fire after launching his presidential campaign and declaring he believes the Federal Bureau of Investigation and even the U.S. Dept. of Justice are not “independent” agencies, and they should be subject to the scrutiny of the President of the United States.

After disgraced GOP President Richard Nixon left office, a virtual wall between the White House and the U.S. Dept. of Justice, including especially the FBI, was created to prevent turning the chief law enforcement agencies of the federal government into political, partisan tools to do the bidding of the nation’s chief executive and Commander-in Chief.

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'Bigotry and megalomania': Scientific American Editorial board warns of DeSantis’ 'antiscience agenda'

The Scientific American's editorial board is highlighting the dangers of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' "antiscience agenda."

In a new editorial, the board noted that the Republican governor "used governmental power in Florida to restrict access to health and education, promoting an intolerant and harmful agenda."

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DeSantis signs law protecting Elon Musk's space flight company – a day after Twitter campaign launch

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a bill that loosens regulations on space flight a day after he announced his presidential campaign in an event hosted by Elon Musk on Twitter Spaces.

Twitter's CEO Musk is also the founder, CEO and chief engineer of SpaceX, which launches from Florida -- and the new bill would shield space flight companies from being sued for accidents that kill or injure crew members, reported Rolling Stone.

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'Putinesque': DeSantis slammed over bombshell claim he has tax-paid officials soliciting donations

Democratic and Republican political campaign experts, lobbyists, politicians, attorneys, and others are stunned and outraged after learning taxpayer-paid government officials in the administration of Florida Republican Governor Ron DeSantis have reportedly been soliciting donations for his presidential campaign, in violation of longstanding expectations of a firm wall between a political leader’s work as an elected public servant, and their political campaign machine.

“Whoever is telling these kids to do this has lost their damn mind,” a Florida Republican lobbyist told NBC News, which broke the bombshell story late Thursday night.

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'The Trump drag': Analyst says Republicans are 'correctly worried' about him bringing them down

Reacting to a Politico report that the Republican Party is having difficulties in recruiting down-ballot candidates because they think their odds of winning will be hampered with Donald Trump as the 2024 GOP presidential nominee, one election analyst said they good reason to be worried.

According to the earlier Politico report, "Many of their prospective recruits are wary of running alongside Trump, who dominates the spotlight, repels crucial independent voters and forces his fellow Republicans to answer for his unpredictable statements. It’s a dynamic that candidates don’t relish, and it has only come into sharper focus since Trump’s CNN town hall, when he spent 70 minutes on primetime television this month unleashing a torrent of incendiary remarks."

Writing for the Cook Political Report, Amy Walter said the numbers are not in Republican's favor in 2024 and a major factor is the "Trump drag."

The largest problem, she notes, is the fact that the former president is highly unpopular with the growing segment of independent voters who will have a major impact in swing districts, making it an uphill battle for the Republican nominee.

IN OTHER NEWS: 'Nerves are fraying at Mar-a-Lago': Legal expert says Jan. 6 sentences should worry Trump

As she explained, Public Opinion Strategies "released the results of a swing-state survey they conducted showing a ticket led by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis produced a generic ballot advantage of one point for Republicans, while a Trump-led ticket produced a down-ballot advantage to Democrats of three points."

That may be too much for a Republican in a highly contested district to overcome.

"To hold the House, Republicans are going to need to beat Democrats in districts where Trump will likely lose," she explained. "In 2016, when Trump was a novelty, 23 Republican candidates won in districts Trump lost. Four years later, only nine Republicans were able to do the same thing."

She continued, "In 2022, Democrats effectively branded the GOP as the party of MAGA and Trump, helping them to pick up a Senate seat and hold down their losses in the House," before predicting, "This is why many Republicans are correctly worried that Trump on the top of the ticket could risk their majority."

You can read more details here.

'Sheer insanity': Morning Joe torches Republicans floating pardons for MAGA rioters

MSNBC's Joe Scarborough called out the depravity of the two leading Republican presidential contenders for signaling they would pardon rioters who were convicted of crimes for their roles in the Jan. 6 insurrection.

Donald Trump and Ron DeSantis have each said they would at least consider pardons for many of the insurrectionists, some of whom were sentenced to years in prison Thursday for taking part in a seditious conspiracy, and the "Morning Joe" host was appalled.

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Twitter engineering chief leaves abruptly one day after DeSantis disaster

The man who served as Twitter's chief engineer has left the company just one day after the platform's disastrous performance during the launch of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' presidential campaign.

BBC News reports that engineering boss Foad Dabiri sent out a tweet on Thursday afternoon stating that "after almost four incredible years at Twitter, I decided to leave the nest yesterday."

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'He's not really that stupid': Morning Joe flattens DeSantis' latest pitch to MAGA voters

MSNBC host Joe Scarborough jumped all over Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) on Friday morning for his promise to look into issuing pardons for Jan. 6 rioters should he be successful in his bid to be elected president in 2024.

Kicking off Friday's "Morning Joe," the host pointed to a clip of former House Speaker Newt Gingrich talking about simplifying the GOP's message to which Scarborough added, "That was Newt Gingrich encouraging Ron DeSantis to get on the level of third graders -- I'm not joking. You know, kind of like Donald Trump does."

Turning to DeSantis, he played a clip of the Florida Republican talking about pardoning the insurrectionists while on a radio show on Thursday.

It was at that point that he expressed disgust with DeSantis for pandering to Trump's MAGA base in an effort to peel some of them away.

READ MORE: 'Where the hell is Georgia?': Ex-Congressman says Trump faces most risk from Georgia probe

"I mean, he's not really that stupid," the MSNBC host suggested. "Maybe he's talking like a third grader."

"We're talking about people who tried to overthrow American democracy," he exclaimed. " Ron knows that -- he knows that! Yet, he's playing that game."

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Lauren Boebert: People were 'more excited about Elon Musk' than DeSantis during Twitter reveal

U.S. Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) said on Thursday night that people were "more excited about Elon Musk" than about Florida Governor Ron DeSantis during the latter's announcement on Twitter about his 2024 presidential campaign.

Boebert, who also made news earlier on Thursday when she implied that the Biden administration's vow to "fight hate" and antisemitism equated to a promise that they are "going after" conservatives, said in a live Twitter Spaces event that she is "not a DeSantis hater" but wants him to wait until 2028 to make his run for the office of presidency. The event also featured Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.).

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