Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis on Tuesday asked the state legislature to repeal a law that has given Walt Disney World special privileges for decades, allowing it to operate as a private government over its properties in the state.
On Wednesday, the Republican-led Florida Senate passed a bill that would eliminate a special tax district that has allowed Walt Disney Co. to govern the land where its theme parks sit, The Wall Street Journal reports. The move comes after Disney began engaging in politics, opposing parental rights legislation that restricts classroom instruction on gender and sexuality to young children.
The Disney measure now goes to the GOP-led Florida House which is expected to also approve it. DeSantis has indicated he will sign it.
The Reedy Creek Improvement District is a private government controlled by Disney World and was set up by the state legislature in 1967 allowing it to provide government services such as zoning, fire protection, utilities, and infrastructure.
The creation of the district, and the control the state gave to Disney over 27,000 acres in Florida, was a crucial element in the company’s plans to build near Orlando in the 1960s. Company officials said they needed autonomy to plan a futuristic city along with the theme park. The city never materialized, but it morphed instead into the EPCOT theme park.
Disney is one of Florida’s biggest private employers. Last year, the company said it had more than 80,000 workers in the state.
According to The Journal, under the bill passed by the Senate 23-16 on Wednesday, any special district established before the ratification of the Florida Constitution in 1968, and not renewed since then, would be dissolved on June 1, 2023.
The measure would affect about six districts across the state, but Reedy Creek is the only district with a high-profile company.
Disney could pursue another special district after the Reedy Creek district is dissolved.
“It is difficult to estimate what a dissolution of Reedy Creek would cost Disney over time,” said Michael Rinaldi, head of U.S. Local Government Ratings at Fitch Ratings told The Journal. It “would eliminate access to tax-exempt debt issuance via Reedy Creek, potentially costing Disney and other landowners within the district more to finance various projects,” he added.
DeSantis vs. Disney: Latest Volleys in Feud Over Parental Rights in Education Law
The move by DeSantis and the Florida Senate are the latest volleys in a feud between the governor and the once-family-friendly entertainment giant over the Sunshine State’s Parental Rights in Education law.
As CBN News has reported, Florida’s Parental Rights in Education bill says schools can’t teach curriculum on sexual orientation and gender identity to very young children from kindergarten to third grade. Leftist groups and biased media outlets have attacked the measure, mischaracterizing it and mislabeling it as the “Don’t Say Gay” bill. The bill does not ban the word “gay” from classrooms, even in casual discussions on either topic.
DeSantis signed the bill into law on March 28. The move prompted an official response from Disney which is now officially engaging in political activism, opposing the parental rights bill and mislabeling it.
“Florida’s HB 1557, also known as the ‘Don’t Say Gay’ bill, should never have passed and should never have been signed into law,” a spokesperson for Disney said in a statement. “Our goal as a company is for this law to be repealed by the legislature or struck down in the courts, and we remain committed to supporting the national and state organizations working to achieve that. We are dedicated to standing up for the rights and safety of LGBTQ+ members of the Disney family, as well as the LGBTQ+ community in Florida and across the country.”
Earlier in March, DeSantis, a potential 2024 presidential candidate, slammed Disney saying, “In Florida, our policies have got to be based on the best interest of Florida citizens, not on the musing of woke corporations.”
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Disney had remained neutral on the bill, even making political donations to both Republicans and Democrats in the legislature. But then LGBTQ advocates who work for the company criticized Disney CEO Bob Chapek for what they said was his slow response to speaking out against the bill. Some walked off the job in protest.
DeSantis insists the policy is reasonable and says parents, not teachers, should broach subjects of sexual orientation and gender identity with children at an age-appropriate time.
Democrats were quick to criticize the governor’s move as retribution for the company’s opposition to the education bill. Some pointed out that Disney has been a major economic driver in the state.
“What world are we living in right now?” asked Democratic state Sen. Audrey Gibson. “It’s the freedom state of Florida. If they disagree with the governor, he brings out the Gatling gun.”
As CBN’s Faithwire reported Monday, the majority of Americans agree with DeSantis and support banning educators from teaching very young children about sexual orientation, gender identity, and transgender issues, according to a new poll.
The Golden/TIPP poll, which surveyed 1,305 adults from April 6-8, found 57% of Americans “agree strongly” or “agree somewhat” with Florida’s Parental Rights in Education bill, which prohibits educators from teaching kids in pre-K through third-grade classrooms about sexual orientation and gender identity.
When broken down along ideological lines, 73% of Republicans, 54% of independents, and 51% of Democrats agreed with the boundaries established by the legislation. Just 42% of those who described themselves as “liberals” backed the bill while 80% of those describing themselves as “conservatives” supported the law.
The Golden/TIPP survey represents an increase in support for the Florida bill. A poll conducted in late March by Morning Consult found just 50% approved of the law.
All of this comes just days after another poll, this one conducted by the Trafalgar Group and the Convention of the States, found nearly 70% of likely American voters said they are now less likely to do business with Disney as a result of the iconic company’s vociferous condemnation of the parental rights law in Florida.
“Disney is about to learn that attempting to ideologically and sexually groom our children is a recipe for brand destruction, costing the company massively in both customers and revenue,” said Convention of the States President Mark Meckler, adding he believes there is “a parents’ revolt movement … growing stronger every day.”
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