“Disney sued us, we have no choice now but to respond,” he said. “The district will seek justice in state court here in central Florida where both it and Disney reside and do business.”
The lawsuit is expected to be filed later Monday.
Disney did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The ongoing fight between Disney and DeSantis over control of its Florida-based theme parks pits the California-based entertainment giant against a powerful governor who is expected to run for president. DeSantis has touted his battle with Disney as a fight against “woke” companies but in recent weeks has faced growing criticism from Republicans for continuing the clash.
Most recently, Speaker Kevin McCarthy said last week that the governor should “sit down and negotiate” with the company while GOP presidential hopeful Vivek Ramaswamy on Sunday said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” that DeSantis “really lost it here. He’s gone on the wrong path.”
The fight has also provided fuel for Democrats as they seek to attack DeSantis. President Joe Biden, during Saturday’s White House Correspondent’s Dinner, joked: “I had a lot of Ron DeSantis jokes ready, but Mickey Mouse beat the hell out of me and got to them first.”
But it’s not just national figures who are criticizing DeSantis. During Monday’s board meeting in central Florida, a local resident, Douglas Dixon, told board members that he supported DeSantis until he started the “stupid war.”
“You guys are terrible and I honestly think you should resign,” Dixon said.
The yearlong fight started last year after Florida Republicans passed legislation that DeSantis signed into law, banning teachers from leading classroom lessons on gender identity and sexual orientation for students in kindergarten through third grade.
Disney’s former CEO, Bob Chapek, denounced the law and in response, DeSantis last year pushed the GOP-controlled Legislature to strip Disney of its self-governing status that the company has enjoyed for decades. Disney remains on of Florida’s biggest employers and has more than 70,000 employees in the state.
Through legislative moves, DeSantis appointed a new board to oversee Disney’s central Florida theme park. But Disney last February quietly signed a pact with the previous board that gave the company more authority.
The governor’s administration only learned of the new pact in March and later sought to invalidate the previous pact.
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( With inputs from : www.politico.com )
That exemption “undermines the credibility of his crusade,” Ramaswamy said.
DeSantis’ battle with Disney began after the Florida Republicans’ passed a bill to limit discussion of sexual orientation and gender in schools, known colloquially as the “Don’t Say Gay” law.
The Republican governor has ramped up his attacks on the company in the recent weeks, moving once again to strip Disney of its self-governing status (after earlier being outfoxed by Disney’s lawyers) and suggesting, apparently jokingly, that the state build a prison near the Florida theme park. Disney has sued, saying it is being discriminated against over political speech.
Ramaswamy joins a growing list of Republicans who have criticized DeSantis’s crusade, including GOP front-runner Donald Trump, who said he Florida governor “is being absolutely destroyed by Disney.”
On Saturday, President Joe Biden chimed in with his own dig at DeSantis’s Disney battle: “I had a lot of Ron DeSantis jokes ready, but Mickey Mouse beat the hell out of me and got to them first,” Biden quipped during his speech at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner.
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( With inputs from : www.politico.com )
The feud started after DeSantis signed the “Don’t Say Gay” bill into law, where, shortly after, Disney issued a statement saying the bill “should never have passed and should never have been signed into law.”
Here are all of the current and potential 2024 GOP presidential candidates who have gotten in on the Disney-DeSantis feud:
Donald Trump
Former President Donald Trump weighed in on the feud this month by stating that DeSantis “is being absolutely destroyed by Disney.”
“Disney’s next move will be the announcement that no more money will be invested in Florida because of the Governor — In fact, they could even announce a slow withdrawal or sale of certain properties, or the whole thing. Watch! That could be a killer,” Trump posted on Truth Social.
Nikki Haley
GOP presidential hopeful Nikki Haley chimed in on the criticism Wednesday in an interview with Fox News and with a tweet, stating Disney should move to her home state of South Carolina because it is “not woke, but we’re not sanctimonious about it either.”
“South Carolina was a very anti-woke state. It still is,” Haley said in an interview with Fox News. “If Disney would like to move their hundreds of thousands of jobs to South Carolina and bring the billions of dollars with them, I’ll let them know I’ll be happy to meet them in South Carolina and introduce them to the governor and legislature that would welcome it.”
Chris Christie
Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie piled onto the Disney-DeSantis feud earlier this month in a Semafor interview when he demurred about DeSantis’ ability to helm the presidency because of the dispute. Christie and DeSantis have yet to declare their candidacy.
“That’s not the guy I want sitting across from President Xi [Jinping] … or sitting across from [President Vladimir] Putin and trying to resolve what’s happening in Ukraine, if you can’t see around a corner [Disney CEO] Bob Iger created for you,” Christie said this month during a live streamed interview with Semafor, adding: “I don’t think Ron DeSantis is a conservative, based on his actions towards Disney.”
Chris Sununu
New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu, who has strongly hinted at a 2024 bid, said DeSantis’ feud with Disney is becoming a tit-for-tat because it’s not going as he had planned.
“Look, this has gone from kind of going after a headline to something that has devolved into an issue, and it convolutes the entire Republican message,” Sununu said on CNN this month. “I just don’t think — it’s not good for Governor DeSantis. I don’t think it’s good for the Republican party.”
Asa Hutchinson
Former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson told Fox News Sunday this week that the ongoing dispute is “not what Republicanism is about” and “not what a conservative is about.”
“I don’t believe if you’re on the left or the right of the political spectrum that government should not be telling business what they can and cannot do in terms of speech. And however you describe it, it appears to me that the governor did not like what Disney was doing in terms of what they were saying and exercising speech, so they’re being punished,” Hutchinson said.
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( With inputs from : www.politico.com )
“Disney now is forced to defend itself against a State weaponizing its power to inflict political punishment,” the lawsuit states.
The two opposing moves Wednesday represent an escalation in the ongoing battle between the Florida governor and Disney. The fight was sparked last year after Disney publicly criticized Florida’s Republican-controlled Legislature for approving a bill banning teachers from leading classroom lessons on gender identity and sexual orientation, known by opponents as the “Don’t Say Gay” bill.
DeSantis, who supported the legislation and signed it into law, later pushed Florida lawmakers to strip Disney of its self-governing status that the company enjoyed for decades at its central Florida theme parks. Disney remains one of Florida’s biggest employers, with more than 70,000 employees at its theme parks near Orlando.
The governor also previously appointed a new board to oversee Disney’s Florida district. But in a surprise move last February, the Central Florida board that had been controlled by Disney quietly approved a pact that gave Disney authority over its parks. The DeSantis administration only learned about the agreement in March and scrambled to respond.
Some Republicans criticized DeSantis over the Disney flap, claiming that the governor — who is expected to jump into the 2024 presidential race — was outmaneuvered by the corporation. Former President Donald Trump, who already announced his presidential bid and is known for fighting with rivals, called DeSantis’ feud with Disney a “political stunt” and lamented that the entire episode is unnecessary.
On Wednesday, the DeSantis-appointed Central Florida Tourism Oversight District Board of Supervisors, during a meeting in Lake Buena Vista, voted to invalidate the February pact in an attempt to wrestle back control of Disney. But that move may be on hold as the lawsuit winds its way through the courts.
Former Florida Supreme Court Justice Alan Lawson, an attorney hired by the district, said that the old board attempted to act without the legal authority to act.
“Everyone must play by the same rules,” Lawson said. “Disney was openly and legally granted unique and special privilege, that privilege of running its own local government for a time. That era has ended.”
Jeremy T. Redfern, deputy press secretary for DeSantis, responded to questions in an email stating: “We are unaware of any legal right that a company has to operate its own government or maintain special privileges not held by other businesses in the state. This lawsuit is yet another unfortunate example of their hope to undermine the will of the Florida voters and operate outside the bounds of the law.”
Representatives of Disney did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
In its lawsuit, Disney stated that it regretted that the ongoing fight has led to a federal lawsuit.
“Governor DeSantis and his allies paid no mind to the governing structure that facilitated Reedy Creek’s successful development until one year ago, when the Governor decided to target Disney,” the lawsuit states. “There is no room for disagreement about what happened here: Disney expressed its opinion on state legislation and was then punished by the State for doing so.”
The lawsuit repeatedly claims that DeSantis targeted Disney and is punishing the company for speaking out against the “Don’t Say Gay” bill. It adds that DeSantis and the new board are violating Disney’s constitutional and the First Amendment rights, adding that once the “political story” was set, the retaliation only became worse, the lawsuit read.
“Indeed, Governor DeSantis has reaffirmed, again and again, that the State campaign to punish Disney for its speech about House Bill 1557 has been a coordinated and deliberate one from the start,” according to the lawsuit. “Disney’s commentary on House Bill 1557 was, he claimed, a ‘declaration of war’ and ‘a textbook example of when a corporation should stay out of politics.’”
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( With inputs from : www.politico.com )
In the dying days of the German Democratic Republic, a group of peace activists gather in a church in Dresden to discuss the more bottom-up, less authoritarian country they would like to see emerge out of the crumbling socialist state.
A mixed-race man on one of the back rows speaks up. “You have no idea of the rage that’s out there”, he says. “If you lock people up in a cage for life then at some point they will find someone to blame for that. Someone who’s different. And you want to abolish this state? The last bit that keeps people from going crazy?”
The scene, from the opening episode of Sam: A Saxon, a seven-part mini-series that premieres on Disney+ on Wednesday, is designed to explain what could have motivated the young man on the back row to do what he did next.
Samuel Meffire, the real-life inspiration for the character played by the German actor Malick Bauer, went on to join the police, becoming the first officer of African descent in the former East Germany, which at the time was notorious for racist violence, and the face of a poster campaign to show a different side to the former GDR. He would soon grow frustrated with his employer’s sluggish bureaucracy, switch sides and end up on Germany’s most wanted list for armed robbery.
The series – Disney’s first original series produced in Germany – does not aspire to challenge storytelling conventions, but it manages in unexpected ways to cut across the often told story of the “peaceful revolution” of 1989 – as well as contemporary debates about law enforcement’s treatment of black people.
“The GDR was not colour-blind,” Meffire, 52, said in an interview with the Guardian. “But it made public spaces colour-blind enough that I could move safely in them. No one would have dared do me harm in public because they would have known that the men with the iron brooms would have swept them up if they did.”
“Of course, that’s an incredibly fine line, to sing a hymn to law enforcement in a dictatorship,” he added. “I don’t mean to sing the praises of a dictatorship, but of the fact that it was safe for me. And I want our democratic state to make us equally safe, wherever we go.”
Now living in Bonn, in western Germany, he said he would not take his two children on a holiday to the eastern state where he grew up.
About 95,000 migrant workers from socialist “brother states” such as Mozambique, Angola, Cuba and Vietnam were registered as living in East Germany in the year that the Berlin Wall fell, though their stay was strictly limited and social mixing with the local population was discouraged by the regime.
Meffire’s father, a Cameroonian engineering student, died two hours before he was born in July 1970, in circumstances that remain unclear: one theory proposed by his mother is that he was poisoned by officials who tried to chemically castrate him.
For “Ossis [East Germans] of colour” such as Meffire, the end of the old regime nonetheless brought a dramatic loss of personal safety. In his memoir, Me, a Saxon, published in English translation by the British publisher Dialogue Books this spring and co-written by the playwright Lothar Kittstein, Meffire, a self-described “fantasy nerd”, describes the outbreak of racist violence in starker, quasi-apocalyptic terms.
“The neo-something is now part of the normal cityscape during the day, too,” he writes. “The vampires are bound to the night no longer. They have acquitted themselves from this spell. And the well-behaved, demoralised citizens applauded them.”
A string of racist attacks in the old eastern states made the east’s problem with the radical right hard for the reunified country to ignore. In September 1991, neo-Nazis rioted for five days in the Saxon town of Hoyerswerda, their attacks on an apartment block housing asylum seekers cheered on by some of the locals.
A western German PR company hired to improve Saxony’s image after these attacks seized on Meffire: a photograph of the shaven-headed police officer in a black rollneck underneath the words “A Saxon” was printed on billboards around Dresden and in newspapers across the entire country.
A scene from Sam: A Saxon, launching on Disney+ this week. Photograph: Yohana Papa Onyango
A friendship with Saxony’s reformist interior minister Heinz Eggert further boosted Meffire’s status as the poster boy for Saxony’s police force, but also made him new enemies among his colleagues. Two years after the publicity campaign, he left to set up his own private security agency but struggled to make the business pay.
In 1995, Meffire was involved in a string of armed robberies and went on the run in France and what was then Zaire – now the Democratic Republic of the Congo – where he was caught up in the first Congo war and eventually extradited to Germany. After serving seven years in prison, he now works as a social worker, security contractor and author.
Both the written and the filmic treatment of Meffire’s story explain his rapid disillusionment with the police by hinting at old political networks that held a protecting hand over the neo-Nazi scene. His verdict on his former colleagues, however, is surprisingly positive. “Hate stories and racism?” he writes. “Not towards me.” One officer who made abusive remarks about his skin colour was quickly reprimanded by his colleagues.
The Disney series, which Meffire and the film-maker Jörg Winger unsuccessfully pitched to Germany’s public broadcasters in 2006, achieves two rare feats for a German production, telling a story with a mainly afrodeutsch set of main characters, without presenting their experiences in a one-dimensional way.
In the third episode, Meffire falls in with a group of blackEast German men who have little time for black political activists from the west, who they dismiss as “beaten-down dogs”. That division, Meffire says, still runs through Germany’s black communities.
“When it comes to the police, there are two perspectives,” he said. “I am a victim – of state despotism, of racial profiling, or at the very least of an … ignorance towards things that shouldn’t take place.
“And then there’s the other view, which is absolutely a minority, that says if we want a diverse police force then we have to step up and shape that police force. And that doesn’t just apply to the police, but also the intelligence community, the military, the judiciary. Because speaking for myself, I don’t know a single black German public prosecutor and not a single black German judge.”
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( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )
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The DeSantis administration, however, learned about the agreement in March and then scrambled to respond.
David Thompson, the managing partner from Cooper & Kirk, a Washington, D.C. law firm hired by the newly-installed board, said Disney’s agreements giving it developmental power were not following state law, quoting that they were “illegal, and they will not stand.” Thompson then compared Disney to Scrooge McDuck.
Thompson and Alan Lawson, former Supreme Court Justice, who was also hired by the board, said the district was in violation of the Florida constitution because it gave authority to a private company, and also did not establish procedures before accepting a new developmental agreement at a Feb. 8 meeting.
Disney did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The fight against Disney and DeSantis began nearly a year ago after Disney opposed the Parental Rights in Education bill, dubbed as the “Don’t Say Gay,” that prohibits teachers from leading classroom discussions on gender identity and sexual identity in kindergarten through third grade.
DeSantis, who signed the bill into law in March, criticized Disney as a “woke” corporation and pushed the GOP-controlled Legislature to strip the company of much of its authority over the Reedy Creek Improvement District, which allowed Disney to operate its own local government.
The board will meet again on April 26, where staff has been asked to make a resolution voiding the agreements.
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( With inputs from : www.politico.com )
“I don’t think Ron DeSantis is a conservative, based on his actions towards Disney,” Christie said.
Former President Donald Trump also criticized DeSantis’ feud with Disney on Tuesday, writing in a Truth Social post that DeSantis is being “absolutely destroyed by Disney.”
“Disney’s next move will be the announcement that no more money will be invested in Florida because of the Governor — In fact, they could even announce a slow withdrawal or sale of certain properties, or the whole thing. Watch! That would be a killer. In the meantime, this is all so unnecessary, a political STUNT! Ron should work on the squatter MESS!” Trump said.
Christie told Semafor Editor-at-Large Steve Clemons that he’ll make a decision in the next couple of weeks on whether he’ll run for president in 2024.
DeSantis has not yet announced a bid for president.
“If you’re going to be serious about this, you probably have to make a decision by May,” Christie said.
Christie was seen speaking to more than three dozen of his former staffers and advisors about a possible 2024 presidential run Monday night in Washington.
“If we go forward, we want all of you to be with us,” Christie told the room Monday. “Thank you to all of you for everything you’ve already done for us. It’s been really, really an amazing ride. And you know what? It might not just be over yet.”
Christie said Tuesday the field for 2024 looks “vacant compared to what I dealt with in 2016.”
“In 2016, none of us took Trump seriously,” Christie said about the primary field of his last presidential campaign.
Christie ran for the 2016 GOP presidential nomination but dropped out in late February of that year. He went on to become one of the first high-profile endorsers of Trump, though the two aren’t close anymore following the Jan. 6 insurrection.
“You have someone who has had an affair with a porn star, paid her off $130,000 to cover it up, to keep that information from the American people … That’s not the character of somebody who I think should be president of the United States.”
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( With inputs from : www.politico.com )
The threat came after Disney in February quietly, through a bureaucratic vote, wrestled back control of the Orlando-area park — though state officials didn’t learn of it until March. Disney’s maneuvering left DeSantis administration officials scrambling to respond and the governor ordered an investigation into the California-based corporation.
During Monday’s press conference, DeSantis also suggested a newly-created state board that owns property in and around Disney World may convert that land into a state park, a rival amusement park or even a state prison. He also floated the idea that the board could look at whether to raise its tax rates, a move that would result in more costs for Disney.
The governor said that other ideas — such as imposing tolls on roads serving the park — would not be considered. But the recommendations, taken in whole, are meant to push back on the criticism directed at DeSantis by former President Donald Trump and others that he had been outfoxed by Disney.
During his remarks, DeSantis touted his decisive reelection victory as proof that Floridians backed his push to strip Disney — which is one of the state’s largest employers — of its long-held control over a special district that was initially created in the late ‘60s to spur the development of Walt Disney World.
DeSantis also added in a statement that “their cheerleaders in the media thought that Disney ‘outsmarted’ the state, but the new control board uncovered their sloppy scheme, and the agreements will be nullified by new legislation that I intend to execute. Disney will operate on a level playing field with every other business in Florida.”
Disney did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The confrontation with Disney started over a year ago when the company opposed Florida’s parental rights in education bill, known by opponents as “Don’t Say Gay,” that banned classroom instruction about sexual orientation and gender identity in lower grades.
After the company vowed to fight for the law’s repeal, DeSantis countered by having legislators pass a bill to dissolve Disney’s special district known as the Reedy Creek Improvement District. The governor and lawmakers followed that up during a February special Legislative session, however, by passing another measure that kept the district intact but with a new board appointed by the governor.
However, before that new law took effect, Disney negotiated a deal with the old board during the winter that transferred control to the company. DeSantis and his board of appointees questioned the legality of this deal, though Disney has maintained in statements that it was perfectly legal and was approved in a public meeting.
Florida currently exempts large theme parks from state inspections, which carves out not just Disney but competitors such as Universal. GOP Agriculture Commissioner Wilton Simpson, whose agency oversees ride safety, said the legislative proposal would allow state inspectors to go in if there had been an accident. DeSantis, in clarifying remarks to reporters, added however this requirement would only apply to parks in special districts, which would mean the new requirement would apply to just Disney.
State Rep. Anna Eskamani, a Democrat from central Florida, blasted DeSantis over his latest confrontation with Disney.
“Gov. DeSantis once again demonstrates his latest attempt to target Walt Disney World that this has nothing to do with corporate accountability and everything to do with his own ego and attempt to get a ‘win” for his GOP base,” Eskamani said. “He needs to let go and move on.”
State Sen. Linda Stewart, another Democrat from Central Florida, said DeSantis was interested in “retaliation, not good government. Turning corporations and properties over to government-control, as DeSantis proposes, just because the governor doesn’t like a position they’ve taken on gay rights, belongs in the playbooks of banana republics, not the state of Florida.”
DeSantis had hinted at his latest actions earlier this month, but when asked about potential legislation, GOP Senate President Kathleen Passidomo said last Wednesday that if “somebody is working on it they haven’t shared it with me.”
Katie Betta, a spokesperson for Passidomo, said in email that DeSantis’ staff began speaking to Passidomo’s late last week and over the weekend ahead of his Monday announcement. She also added: “As you are aware, issues can develop throughout the course of session.”
The Disney legislation adds to a long line of priorities that DeSantis is pushing through in the weeks ahead of an expected presidential campaign. The Legislature has already passed measures on the death penalty, a ban on abortion after six weeks of pregnancy, and easing gun restrictions that had the backing of the governor.
Legislators who joined DeSantis on Monday said they fully backed his latest efforts to go after Disney, including one whose district includes the theme park and railed at what she called Disney’s embrace of “radical gender ideologies.”
“Here in the free state of Florida it is we the people not woke corporations,” said Rep. Carolina Amesty (R-Windermere). “We love Disney however you cannot indoctrinate our children.”
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( With inputs from : www.politico.com )
The Walt Disney Company has appointed Asad Ayaz as its first-ever Chief Brand Officer, a newly created role aimed at stewarding and elevating the Disney brand globally. Prior to his new position, Ayaz served as the President of Marketing for The Walt Disney Studios.
As the Chief Brand Officer, Ayaz will be responsible for developing and executing brand marketing campaigns for the Walt Disney Company. He will report directly to recently returned CEO Bob Iger and oversee the Disney100 campaign as the company celebrates its 100th year.
Ayaz will also continue his duties as the President of Marketing for Walt Disney Studios. In this role, he will oversee all aspects of marketing and publicity for the Studios’ films and series as well as for Disney+ globally. Ayaz will report to Disney Entertainment co-chairman Alan Bergman.
Ayaz has been with the Walt Disney Company for 18 years and has developed and led marketing campaigns for some of the most successful film releases, including Star Wars: The Force Awakens, Black Panther, and Avatar: The Way of Water. Other feature film campaigns include Disney’s live-action hits Aladdin and The Lion King, Frozen 2, Encanto, Turning Red, and Free Guy.
Ayaz’s appointment as the first Chief Brand Officer will also be seen as a test to see whether he could be the company’s next CEO. Current CEO Iger is set to serve as CEO for two more years.