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Florida’s Upcoming Legislative Session To Include Long List Of GOP-Backed Bills

  • Florida’s legislative session will begin Tuesday ahead of a likely presidential campaign launch for Gov. Ron DeSantis.
  • The GOP-held supermajority is expected to push through a long list of conservative bills in the next couple of months, many of which relate to education, to bolster the governor’s track record.
  • “Our schools should be teaching students to respect and obey their parents, not hiding critical information from them,” Kathleen Passidomo, Republican Senate President, told Politico in a statement.

Florida’s legislative session will reconvene on Tuesday, and several GOP-backed bills are set to make their way to Gov. Ron DeSantis’ desk ahead of a possible 2024 campaign launch, according to Politico.

The Republican supermajority legislature will propose various conservative bills over the next two months, including legislation relating largely to education, along with other gun rights, immigration and death penalty proposals, Politico reported. These GOP-led efforts come before a likely presidential announcement by the governor to give him more legislative successes to campaign on, according to Politico.

“I’ve never seen a governor in my lifetime with this much absolute control of the agenda in Tallahassee as Ron DeSantis,” Florida lobbyist Brian Ballard told the Tampa Bay Times.

The legislature will expand on the Parental Rights in Education bill through several bills, focusing on LGBTQ students and faculty’s usage of pronouns, according to Politico. Faculty may not ask students for their preferred pronouns, and employees aren’t permitted to relay their pronouns if they aren’t consistent with their sex.

Restrictions on teaching about sexual orientation and gender identity will be applied to pre-k through 8th grade, an extension of the previous K-3 provision, Politico reported. Lawmakers said children should learn about these topics from their parents, and not from their school.

Critics call this the “Don’t Say They” bill, a play on the “Don’t Say Gay” bill, which opponents dubbed last year’s parents rights bill, according to Politico. The bills would also increase library transparency, allowing parents to see what books and reading materials their children are exposed to.

“Our schools should be teaching students to respect and obey their parents, not hiding critical information from them,” Kathleen Passidomo, Republican Senate President, told Politico in a statement.

The two bills differ slightly in that FL HB 1223 expands parental rights to charter schools and FL SB 1320 requires Florida schools to teach students that “biological males impregnate biological females” and “reproductive roles are binary, stable, and unchangeable.”

“We want parents to be more responsible for their children,” Rep. Ralph Massullo told Politico. “And we believe … preteens shouldn’t be sexualized in schools by our education system.”

Another proposal bolsters state-funded private school vouchers by providing the Family Empowerment Scholarship, allowing access for K-12 students of any income, according to Politico. A package bill proposes forbidding spending on diversity, equity and inclusion and critical race theory (CRT) programs. It also prohibits majors and minors in CRT and gender ideology.

FL SB 256 provides restrictions for the state’s teachers unions. The governor said that these “partisan unions” shouldn’t play a role in Florida’s education system, Politico reported.

Another bill would ban diversity programs and classes in higher education and another would ban gender-affirming care for minors, and a gun rights bill would allow permitless carry of a concealed weapon, according to the Tampa Bay Times.The governor is lobbying for the death penalty in cases where the jury isn’t unanimous.

The governor’s immigration bill proposal sets forth more intense restrictions and penalties for human smuggling and the detention of illegal aliens, like prohibiting anyone who entered the country unlawfully from receiving an identification card and strengthening E-verify requirements so employers ensure their employees are citizens.

DeSantis also proposed legislation to protect the state from environmental, social and governance practices, or ESG, to prohibit financial institutions from discriminating against Floridians for their political beliefs.

The governor’s office referred the Daily Caller News Foundation to numerous proposed policies in response to a request for comment.

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Mary Lou Masters

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Mary Lou Masters
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