DeSantis Credits Constitutional Freedom, Spending Policies for Florida’s Economic Performance

DeSantis Credits Constitutional Freedom, Spending Policies for Florida’s Economic Performance
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis mingles with audience members after signing into law Senate Bill 7072 at Florida International University in Miami on May 24, 2021. Samira Bouaou/The Epoch Times
Naveen Athrappully
Updated:

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis gave credit for his state’s jobs and economic performance to respecting constitutional rights, ensuring freedom from vaccine mandates, low taxation, and government spending policies.

DeSantis discussed on Fox News the Sunshine State’s stance regarding COVID-19 measures and its focus on the constitutional rights of Floridians.

“At the end of the day in Florida, Floridians know we will not let anybody lock them down. We will not let anyone take their jobs,” DeSantis said. “We will not let anyone ruin their businesses, and we will not let anyone close their schools, so people are going to be able to live life. They’re going to be able to make their own decisions.”

As for the Omicron coronavirus variant, a mild but fast-spreading variant of the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus, DeSantis said that when compared to the Delta variant, “Omicron has not shown to produce the same level of hospitalizations.”

“The numbers of South Africa were, by and large, very encouraging and didn’t justify the hysteria that you saw by lots of folks in corporate media,” he said.

DeSantis then talked about the COVID-19 pandemic and lockdowns, which have turned into massive impediments that have affected the daily lives of the majority of Americans.

“I cannot believe that something that started with ‘15 days to slow the spread,’ now, almost two years later, you’re seeing lockdowns and closures,” he said, noting that some places have mask and vaccine mandates, but are still locked down because the number of cases keeps rising.

There has been only one death attributed to the Omicron variant in the United States so far.

Florida has largely supported early treatments for COVID-19, including monoclonal antibody treatments. DeSantis said hospitalization rates in the state were relatively low compared to other parts of the country because of these monoclonal clinics.

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) mandate requiring all private businesses with more than 100 employees to get vaccinated is “a terrible decision,” DeSantis said.

“Floridians are able to opt out of these types of mandates. The OSHA mandate must not be allowed to stand, on a legal and constitutional standpoint. They reached back decades and found some statute and are using that to force vaccinations—that’s never been done in the history of our country, and so I think it’s a massive expansion of federal power that goes beyond the Constitution.”

When asked whether he had received a COVID-19 vaccine booster shot, DeSantis replied that he has just had the “normal shot” and that it was “people’s individual decision” whether to get the vaccine booster dose.

Florida added 50,000 new jobs in November, a quarter of the 200,000 total jobs added throughout the country. DeSantis said it was a combination of freedoms, low taxes, and spending policies that made the state perform well compared to a state such as New York.

“People know in Florida, their freedoms are going to be respected,“ he said. ”People know they can invest here and not have their businesses shut down. People know they’re going to get jobs here and not be forced out because of mandates.”

Naveen Athrappully
Naveen Athrappully
Author
Naveen Athrappully is a news reporter covering business and world events at The Epoch Times.
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