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Ron DeSantis

‘Parents matter’: Mother of high school student ‘very upset’ DeSantis told her minor son to take off his mask

Governor Ron DeSantis came under fire Wednesday after telling the high school students he was using as a backdrop for a press conference to take off their masks – in violation of CDC guidelines – calling them "ridiculous" and mask-wearing "COVID theater." DeSantis has banned mask mandates for schools, claiming parents "absolutely have every right" to choose if their children wear masks.

Now a parent of one of the Middleton High School students he ordered to remove their masks is blasting the Florida Republican governor, saying that she instructed her son, who is a minor, to wear the mask at the event. She says DeSantis put her at risk by telling her son to remove the mask.

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'Take them off': Video catches Ron DeSantis scolding students for wearing masks at his photo op

Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) appeared disgusted on Wednesday as he told students at the University of South Florida to remove their masks before his press conference began.

“You do not have to wear those masks,” DeSantis told the group of students who were standing behind his podium. “I mean, please take them off. Honestly, it’s not doing anything and we’ve gotta stop with this COVID theater."

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DeSantis refuses to divest Florida of $300 million in Russian investments – but criticizes Biden over Russia and Ukraine

Governor Ron DeSantis is once again mud-slinging while refusing to take concrete steps to address the problems in his own backyard.

The Florida Republican is refusing to divest the Sunshine state of $300 million in Russian-owned companies – investments it controls – while attacking President Joe Biden on Ukraine and Russia, as The New York Daily News reports.

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The View tells CPAC speaker to her face that the GOP was taken over by the far-right

Co-hosts of "The View" called out guest co-host Michele Tafoya on Tuesday for her participation in CPAC as one of the questioners and speakers, which the women called an example of the extreme right.

Tafoya told the women that she considers herself to be a Libertarian, despite the far-right turn that the GOP has taken.

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How US 'wokeness' became a right-wing cudgel around the world

With Covid-19 beginning to fade into the rear view mirror, the largest annual conservative gathering in the United States sounded the alarm this weekend over what they deem to be another fast-spreading virus: "wokeness."

Once a rallying cry for Americans to be alert to racism, "wokeness" has become the political term of the hour, co-opted by culture warriors to denigrate "political correctness" and leftist orthodoxy.

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Alex Vindman explains how Trump's coup attempt encouraged Putin's Ukraine invasion

It's worth remembering in this moment of global crisis that Donald Trump's first impeachment was the result of Trump's attempt to blackmail Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky by withholding weapons and other military aid that Congress had already authorized. What Trump wanted was for Zelensky and the Ukrainian government to smear Joe Biden with false charges, potentially influencing the outcome of the 2020 presidential election.

That crime was part of a much larger pattern, in which Donald Trump and his regime consistently acted as vassals for Vladimir Putin's regime and Russia's strategic interests.

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CPAC attendees back Trump for president, DeSantis as 2nd choice

ORLANDO, Fla. — As the Conservative Political Action Committee conference wrapped up Sunday in Orlando, a straw poll revealed former President Donald Trump retained strong support among Republicans for another White House bid, and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is a clear second choice. The poll included ballots by 2,574 attendees and showed 59% selected Trump as their preferred presidential nominee, stronger than his 55% support last year, the results distributed by the conference showed. DeSantis was the second-highest choice at 28%, also an improvement on his 21% total last year. “So much for [T...

Trump’s ‘supreme reign’ reflected in golden statue at CPAC conference: report

A golden statue of Donald Trump at this week's Conservative Political Action Conference in Orlando reflected the former president's "supreme reign" over the event — despite "auditions for the MAGA mantle" by other 2024 GOP hopefuls," according to the Daily Beast.

"Trump’s presence loomed large throughout the confab even before he was scheduled to deliver Saturday evening’s keynote address," the site reported Friday. "Throughout the conference’s main hall, exhibitors prominently displayed Trump’s likeness to sell their products, including a large golden statue of the former president hawking Patriot Mobile, 'America’s only Christian conservative wireless provider,' along with the usual assortment of MAGA wares including hand-stitched hammocks embroidered with Trump’s name and '45.'"

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Republican party in the long shadow of Donald Trump at CPAC

The 75-year-old billionaire and former US president Donald Trump is due to speak on February 26, 2022, at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Orlando, Florida

Orlando (AFP) - Donald Trump may have lost the last US election and be under investigation over the 2021 Capitol riot, but the former president's dominance remains undented in the Republican party, where he is virtually unchallenged.

The 75-year-old billionaire is due to speak on Saturday at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Orlando, Florida -- an opportunity to gild his popularity.

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'That is fraud': Report gives new details into Florida GOP scheme to trick voters into switching parties

Republican Party canvassers tricked more than 100 South Florida voters — many of them elderly and/or immigrants — into switching their party affiliation to the GOP last year, according to a bombshell investigative report published Friday by the Miami Herald.

The newspaper sent a team of reporters to eight low-income housing projects in Hialeah and Little Havana, where voter registration data showed unusually high numbers of switching from one party to another.

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Florida GOP bills that bar schools and businesses from addressing key issues of inequality are an 'embrace of authoritarianism': op-ed

This Thursday, the Florida House passed two bills that critics say seek to ban discussions in schools and business about racial, gender and sexual orientation-based discrimination. In an op-ed for MSNBC this Friday, Ja'han Jones contends that the bills are an example of Florida Republicans' "increasingly anti-democratic stance against socially conscious teachings."

"The so-called “Don’t Say Gay” bill — officially, and deceptively, titled the Parental Rights in Education bill — would ban any instruction about sexual orientation or gender from kindergarten to third grade, 'or in a manner that is not age-appropriate or developmentally appropriate for students in accordance with state standards,'" Jones writes. "The bill came to fruition amid conservatives’ nationwide attacks on school lesson plans discussing social inequality. The Republican Party has leaned into these attacks as a wedge issue primarily to rile up white parents, and many conservatives see this rhetoric as their key to winning elections this year and in 2024."

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Anti-‘woke’ and ‘Don’t Say Gay’ bills clear Florida House following emotional debates

Florida House Democrats pushed back on legislation that would limit how topics such as LGBTQ people and racism is talked about in classrooms or the workplace, contending the bills will have a chilling effect on teachers and employers.

Yet two hotly-debated bills — HB 7, limiting conversations about racism and sexism in schools and at work, and HB 1557, restricting classroom discussions on sexual orientation and gender identity — were both passed by the House on near-party lines Thursday.

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Rick Scott competing to be ‘Bigot of the Year’ with his ‘attention-seeking gimmick’ at CPAC: Florida columnist

Sen. Rick Scott (R-FL) was harshly criticized for bigotry on Friday as the far-right gathers in Orlando for the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC).

"In Florida, the competition for Bigot of the Year is tight — and, as if there weren’t enough candidates in the running with Gov. Ron DeSantis and the GOP members of the Florida Legislature acting to suppress minorities — here comes Sen. Rick Scott, presenting from Washington his own brand of social engineering," Fabiola Santiago wrote for the Miami Herald. "The first-term, Boomer senator and former Florida governor, 69, calls his idea of what the United States of America should look like — and how patriotic Americans should act, democracy be damned — 'An 11 Point Plan to Rescue America.'"

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