Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

Ron DeSantis

Now the far right is coming for college too — with taxpayer-funded 'classical education'

Last fall, when professors at Flagler College, a private liberal arts school in St. Augustine, Florida, gathered for a faculty senate meeting, they learned that the college administration had worked with their local legislator to propose a new academic center on campus, the Flagler College Institute for Classical Education. To administrators, it was an exciting prospect: the chance to receive $5 million from the state to shore up their "first year seminar," a universal core curriculum for incoming freshmen intended to help students, particularly first-generation students, prepare for the rigors of college.

But some faculty members felt concerned, reading between the lines in a state that has become ground zero for the nation's education debates — where Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Trump-style Republican with his eyes on the White House, has imposed gag orders and mandates on K-12 schools and described universities as "hotbeds of stale ideology" and "indoctrination factories."

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's GOP rivals smell 'blood in the water' -- but their plans could massively backfire: analysis

According to MSNBC political analyst Zeeshan Aleem, former President Donald Trump has faced humiliation as multiple high-profile Republican Party candidates he endorsed have flopped with voters -- but that could actually be good news for him and strengthen his 2024 presidential bid should he choose to run.

While critics of the former president have been rubbing their hands in glee as Trump-endorsed Rep. Madison Cawthorn (R-NC), former Sen. David Perdue (R-GA) and Rep. Jody Hice (R-GA) went down to defeat in the past few weeks, Aleem claimed the belief that Trump has lost his mojo with voters is leading to more rivals for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination to seriously consider challenging him.

Keep reading... Show less

Georgia Republicans rejected Trump — not just his lies: columnist

The Georgia election results showed that voters weren't going to support the so-called "big lie" that former President Donald Trump won the 2020 election and that it was somehow stolen from him. What is frequently being ignored in the post-mortem of the Republican Primary is that Trumpism, in general, was also rejected by voters.

Writing for CNN.com, White House correspondent John Harwood explained that Gov. Brian Kemp's success over former Sen. David Perdue shows a party that tends to manufacture a culture war for the sake of an election. The "controversies," he wrote, have become "a substitute for materially improving the lives of their constituents."

Keep reading... Show less

'Anxious' Trump fears he's losing control of the GOP -- and wants to launch his 2024 campaign this summer

According to a report from the New York Times, former president Donald Trump is growing increasingly anxious that his grip on the Republican Party is starting to slip away and has begun pushing his aides to be ready to launch his third run for the presidency as early as this summer.

As the Times' Maggie Haberman and Shane Goldmacher wrote, every time a high profile GOP candidate that the former president endorsed loses, it is a real-time demonstration of his influence waning with conservative voters -- and his enemies within the Republican Party are taking notice.

Keep reading... Show less

New court ruling appears to favor DeSantis' plan to abolish Black-access district in North Florida

A Florida appellate court ruled Friday that a trial judge abused his authority in ordering state government to retain a Black-access congressional district in North Florida before holding a full trial on whether the state’s Fair District amendment required doing so.

The 20-page opinion (docket here) from the First District Court of Appeal in Tallahassee arrived exactly one week after the same court reinstated an injunction against enforcing a congressional redistricting plan forced upon the Legislative by Gov. Ron DeSantis that abolished the district in question.

Keep reading... Show less

Investigation finds 'whistleblower's' claims that Ron DeSantis covered up COVID deaths are 'unsubstantiated'

One of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' most vocal critics made “unsubstantiated” claims that state health officials fired her because she refused to present manipulated COVID-19 data online, according to the results of an investigation by the state's inspector general, NBC News reports.

"The 27-page report from the Florida Department of Health’s Office of Inspector General said it found 'insufficient evidence' to support Rebekah Jones' accusations that she was asked to falsify Covid positivity rates or misrepresent them on the state’s dashboard she helped design," NBC News' report stated. "The report also 'exonerated' officials accused by Jones of wrongdoing because they removed a data section from the website to ensure that private individual health information was not released publicly."

Keep reading... Show less

Who would you vote for in 2024 - Biden or DeSantis?

Vote in This Urgent Poll

Vote to see the results!


Raw Story, America's largest progressive news site, is conducting a series of national online polls about who readers would vote for in 2024.

Keep reading... Show less

'Paper tiger' Trump itching to announce 2024 run -- but allies fear 'his power is greatly diminished'

Donald Trump intends to run for president again, but allies expect him to face a bevy of Republican challengers -- and advisers are hoping he doesn't throw his MAGA hat in the ring.

The former president has been quizzing advisers and visitors at Mar-a-Lago about his potential GOP challengers for 2024, and advisers have repeatedly pressed him not to announce his campaign before November's midterm election, which Republican strategists fear would rally Democratic voters and boost President Joe Biden's approval rating, reported the Washington Post.

Keep reading... Show less

Far right activist behind CRT panic brags about attacks on Disney, State Farm for LGBTQ support: Others ‘will be next’

The far right-wing activist whose work helped ignite millions of Americans into fighting against the specter of something they had never heard before and knew nothing about is now bragging about turning his tactics against corporate America's support for the LGBTQ community – and he's just issued a warning, or, some might say, a threat.

Christopher Rufo, a senior fellow at the right-wing Manhattan Institute, is the man behind the right's false panic and fury over CRT, Critical Race Theory. He's proudly said he wants to "have the public read something crazy in the newspaper and immediately think 'critical race theory,'" and "put all of the various cultural insanities under that brand category."

Keep reading... Show less

‘Find a spine’: State Farm criticized after celebrating Pride then dropping program supporting LGBTQ books in schools

Over the past year, insurance giant State Farm has posted ten tweets supporting LGBTQ people, programs, and organizations, as recently as last week:

The $79 billion company will turn 100 years old next month, which coincidentally is LGBTQ Pride Month. It has made strong statements in support of LGBTQ equality and diversity. Just last June they tweeted: "We believe no one should be afraid to celebrate who they are. Let’s support our LGBTQ+ neighbors and show our Pride together!" They even tagged the tweet with their own corporate branding, using #GoodNeighbor and #PrideMonth hastags.

Keep reading... Show less

Defeat for DeSantis as appeals court rejects most of Florida's new social media law

By Brendan Pierson

(Reuters) - Most of a Florida law that sought to stop social media companies from restricting users' political speech violates the companies' free speech rights and cannot be enforced, a federal appeals court ruled on Monday, agreeing with a lower court.

Keep reading... Show less

Pete Davidson, Ron DeSantis, Volodymyr Zelenskyy among Time’s 100 most influential people of 2022

Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Vladimir Putin, Ron DeSantis and New Yorkers Pete Davidson and Mary J. Blige are among Time magazine’s wide-ranging selections for the 100 most influential people of 2022. The new list, which came out Monday, includes fan-favorites and controversial figures, with each person designated as an artist, innovator, titan, leader, icon or pioneer. The selections of the Ukrainian President Zelenskyy and the Russian President Putin come three months after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. “In President Zelensky, the people of Ukraine have a leader worthy of their bravery and resilienc...

'They've had enough': Morning Joe reveals why Fox News and GOP voters prefer Trump's top rival

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is emerging as the favorite for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, and MSNBC's Joe Scarborough explained why he's overtaking Donald Trump as the GOP leader.

A recent straw poll showed DeSantis leading Trump as the preferred candidate in the next presidential election, and the "Morning Joe" host said there were other signs that Republicans and conservative media are moving on without the former president.

Keep reading... Show less