Saturday, September 17, 2022

Florida taxpayers paid $615,000 for DeSantis to fly Texas migrants to island. (SAR)

Florida's demagogic, dastardly, dishonest "Boy Governor" RONALD DION DeSANTIS showed his ass by spending $615,000 of our money to fly Venezuelan refugees to the island of Martha's Vineyard off the coast of Massachusetts.  

No one from Florida let Massachusetts officials know the refugees were coming by plane, in the off-season (or "Indian Summer," as they call it on Cape Cod), when jobs are scarce.

The refugees were dumped as part of DeSANTIS's performative electioneering.  Was this a federal crime?  Were these Venezuelan refugees deceived about jobs and training by DeSANTIS's arachnid apparatchiks?  

FBI and USDOJ must investigate this civil rights violation. 

Like Southern segregationists' 1962 Reverse Freedom Rides, Governor DeSANTIS's September 2022 airlift of Venezuelan refugees rather reminds me of what Joseph N. Welch said about Senator Joseph R. McCarthy in the Army-McCarthy hearings, "have you no sense of decency, Sir?"




DeSANTIS is an unoriginal critter -- petty, vindictive, rebarbative, retromigent, barbarous and cruel.

DeSANTIS is the worst that Harvard Law School has to offer us. DeSANTIS is the sibilant, smug, sinister and supercilious former Yale University Baseball Team Captain, a Dull MePublican performance artist without ethics or compassion, 

It is all about the cruelty with this energetic energumen and his dirty tricks, at your expense. 

It's all about him and his precious political career.  This pompous are said it -- ipse dixit, the Harvard Law School graduate can't fix it:  "“There's also going to be buses, and there will likely be more flights,” said DeSantis. “I'll tell you this, the Legislature gave me $12 million. We're going to spend every penny of that to make sure that we're protecting the people of the state of Florida.”

Harrumph, Governor:  you need a checkup from the neck up.

From St. Augustine Record/USA Today Network:


Florida taxpayers paid $615,000 for DeSantis to fly Texas migrants to island

John Kennedy
Capital Bureau | USA TODAY NETWORK – FLORIDA

TALLAHASSEE – Gov. Ron DeSantis paid $615,000 in Florida taxpayer money to relocate almost 50 Venezuelan migrants from Texas to Martha’s Vineyard as calls intensified Friday from Democrats demanding an investigation of the action. 

Democrat Charlie Crist, who is challenging DeSantis in the November governor’s race, tweeted the dollar amount after campaign researchers found the Sept. 8 payment to Destin-based Vertol Systems, a transportation services company, on the state’s transparencyflorida.gov site. 

The payment was from the Florida Department of Transportation, which oversees a new, $12 million program to relocate "unauthorized aliens" from the state. 

“Ron won’t answer questions, so we looked ourselves,” Crist tweeted. 

Texas-to-Fla, then Martha's Vineyard:DeSantis sends migrants to Martha's Vineyard, lashing out against President Biden's border policy

More on that $12M relocation fund:Controversy continues over DeSantis' $12 million plan to transport undocumented migrants out of Florida

Fla's GOP Legislature was on board: Florida Senate passes controversial immigration enforcement plan

He added, “So Floridians paid $12,300 for each refugee DeSantis trafficked for his own political purposes.” 

DeSantis hasn’t provided any details about how he conducted the relocation move Wednesday, which came a day before Texas Gov. Greg Abbott sent two busloads of migrants to the official residence of Vice President Kamala Harris in Washington, D.C. He did tell reporters Friday that he's planning more similar operations to keep migrants out of Florida.

DeSantis' office says it acted in compliance with Florida's immigration relocation program

Further uncertainties linger about the state’s role in transporting the migrants, who are mostly Venezuelans. Many reported that they had been recruited to the flights in Texas by a woman identified only as “Perla,” who promised expedited work papers and other opportunities in Boston. 

The governor's office Friday, though, said it acted in accordance with the state's relocation program.

"Florida’s immigration relocation program aims to interdict human smugglers, traffickers, or other criminal aliens found within the state, as well as prevent illegal aliens at the southern border from entering Florida," spokeswoman Taryn Fenske said in a statement.

DeSantis has been telegraphing to donors:Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has been telegraphing Martha's Vineyard migrant flights for months

DeSantis sent migrants to Martha's Vineyard:Here are 5 other moments Florida governor went viral

State budget language authorizing the $12 million program allows for the transport and "relocation of unauthorized aliens," but only mentions those in Florida.

Still, the relocations have enflamed the debate over President Biden’s border policy, which Republicans say is heightening the influx of undocumented migrants, drugs and crime into the U.S., particularly to GOP-led border states Texas and Arizona. 

Biden denounced the governors’ moves, which came after Abbott and Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey already sent migrants to Chicago, New York and Washington, D.C. 

“Instead of working with us on solutions, Republicans are playing politics with human beings, using them as props,” Biden said. “What they’re doing is simply wrong.” 

After two days of uncertainty on the Massachusetts island, the migrants Friday were moved to a military installation, Joint Base Cape Cod, for temporary shelter and humanitarian support. 

Civil rights attorneys are helping with their immigration efforts, and volunteers on Martha’s Vineyard had fed and helped house them in a local church. 

Gov. Ron DeSantis spent $615,000 in Florida taxpayer money to fly almost 50 migrants to Martha's Vineyard, state records show.

Crist agreed that U.S. Justice Department should investigate whether DeSantis violated federal trafficking laws

Crist was at the state Capitol Friday for a campaign rally, where he said he agreed with the call from Florida Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried, who he defeated in the August Democratic primary, that the U.S. Justice Department should investigate whether DeSantis violated federal trafficking laws in moving the migrants. 

“This may have not just been an immoral act,” Crist said. “This may have been an illegal act. And we have the right to know.” 

DeSantis seemed to be mindful that Florida’s relocation law, which he pushed through the Republican-controlled Legislature this year, addresses only moving “unauthorized aliens from this state.” 

The two planes paid by Florida left San Antonio, Texas, then went to Crestview on the Florida Panhandle, a stop possibly intended to legitimize the use of Florida taxpayer dollars. From there, one plane went to Spartanburg, S.C., before continuing onto Martha’s Vineyard. 

The other plane went to Charlotte, N.C., before landing on the island, according to flight records. 

Bruce Bowman, vice president and general counsel for Emerald Coast Aviation, which runs Bob Sikes Airport in Crestview, told the USA Today Network-Florida that nobody called ahead to let them know that a plane bearing undocumented immigrants or a plane sent from Texas by the governor was going to land in Crestview.

"Nothing happened out of the ordinary. What was reported to me was the plane landed, we fueled it and it left," he said.

DeSantis, an expected 2024 Republican presidential contender, defended his decision, speaking Thursday in Niceville. 

“We take what’s happening at the southern border very seriously, unlike some, and unlike the President of the United States who has refused to lift a finger to secure that border,” DeSantis said. 

On Friday, DeSantis, speaking in Daytona Beach, said more flights are planned to send Venezuelan immigrants and others to out-of-state “sanctuary” communities.

“There's also going to be buses, and there will likely be more flights,” said DeSantis. “I'll tell you this, the Legislature gave me $12 million. We're going to spend every penny of that to make sure that we're protecting the people of the state of Florida.”

John Kennedy is a reporter in the USA TODAY Network’s Florida Capital Bureau. He can be reached at jkennedy2@gannett.com, or on Twitter at @JKennedyReport

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Human rights violations, civil rights violations, using unwitting people for far right political stunts. All in a days work for the modern troll GOP. Piss everyone off accept for their degenerate base and expect great results in presidential elections. Brilliant political tactics.