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Extensive Media Enterprises Good Wednesday morning. I've carried the story my whole life because I carry the name. In the Gospel, Peter swears he will never abandon Jesus — and before the night is out, he denies knowing him three times. Then the rooster crows, and Peter weeps, because he finally understands what he is. I can't remember seeing Ron DeSantis weep. But this week, the cock crowed for him just the same. 
Ron DeSantis discovers the downside of making every hill his own. For more than a year, DeSantis held Florida's entire legislative process hostage to property taxes. He called lawmakers back to Tallahassee for a Special Legislative Session. He insisted, demanded really, that the Legislature put relief on the ballot. They did. And on Monday, the Governor announced he won't lift a finger to pass it. "While I support it," he said, "I do think it's not all I was hoping to see." The reason he won't build a political committee to pass it? "What the Legislature did wasn't my proposal," DeSantis explained. He conceded Amendment 3 is still "good for taxpayers." He admitted he'll vote for it himself. He just won't spend a dollar or a day of his political capital on it. Hours later, a fundraising email from his RON PAC hit inboxes — asking donors to help him elect other conservatives. He wasn't working to provide the very relief he demanded for homeowners. Strip away the policy, and you find the man, and the man has a pattern. Ask Paul Renner, the House Speaker who branded Florida the "Free State" at DeSantis' side, only to get knifed by DeSantis, who described him as ill-advised the day Renner filed for Governor. Ask Jay Collins, the Lieutenant Governor DeSantis handpicked, paraded, and then refused to endorse in Collins' own hometown. Ask Donald Trump, who saved DeSantis' 2018 campaign and got repaid with a Primary so bitter that Trump's own voters now call DeSantis a traitor. Ask the staffers who needed cupcakes to lure him to meetings, one of whom told reporters, "loyalty and trust, that is not a currency he deals in." Some on the MAGA right diagnosed it years ago in a statement titled simply "A Lesson for DeSantis: Loyalty Counts." DeSantis keeps proving his critics right. Trump made him. Renner served him. Collins idolized him. The homeowners believed him. Each one, the moment they stopped being useful, became disposable. I'll admit that, at first, I was surprised by DeSantis' decision on Amendment 3. So I called a source who has advised DeSantis in the past and said as much. They stopped me cold. "You probably know him as well as anyone not in his inner circle," they said. "After watching him for eight years as Governor, how could you possibly be surprised?" I had forgotten that DeSantis is a man with no people … no friends … no country. The rooster has crowed far more than three times now. The difference between DeSantis and my namesake is simple. Peter heard the crow and wept. DeSantis hears it and sends out a fundraising appeal. ___ A pair of the nation's most prominent civic organizations launched a yearlong campaign Tuesday inviting Americans to symbolically "sign on" to the Declaration of Independence — and Florida institutions are anchoring it. The Sign ON 250 initiative, a partnership of the National League of Cities and America's Newspapers, lets people of all ages add their names to a digital version of the Declaration as the country marches into its 250th year. It kicked off June 30 and runs through July 4, 2027. 
The Founders get a modern call to action, minus the parchment security deposit. Two Florida pillars are central to the effort: the Bob Graham Center for Public Service at the University of Florida and the Tallahassee-based James Madison Institute. Tallahassee's Sachs Media is coordinating the campaign, and country music star Billy Dean composed and recorded an original ballad to boost participation. NLC President Kevin Kramer cast it as a unifying moment. History "has served us with a special opportunity — 250 years in the making — to endorse, embrace, and enthusiastically add our own names and signatures to the Declaration of Independence," he said. "This inspiring initiative can bring us all together, despite any differences." A Sachs Media survey of 1,500 adults June 12-14 suggests the appetite is there: 92% called the Declaration's principles important — 93% of Democrats, 98% of Republicans and 86% of independents — and more than 3 in 4 said they would gladly add their name. James Madison Institute CEO Bob McClure framed signing as a modern act of patriotism. "The principles in that document remain relevant," he said, "and it matters that we say so — out loud, on the record, with our names attached." ___ Evidently, Americans would still co-sign these truths. In her latest Decyphered, Sachs Media's Karen Cyphers digs into what Americans actually know about the document turning 250 next week — and what they make of it once reminded. In a new Sachs Media survey of 1,500 adults, only half can correctly name the Declaration's purpose, and just 2 in 3 identify which anniversary July 4 marks. Yet, when told what the document actually says, more than 9 in 10 call its principles personally important, with unalienable rights topping the list. 
America’s original group project gets one more round of edits. Ask people to add their own name to the Declaration through the above-referenced Sign ON 250 initiative, and 3 in 4 would gladly sign on, for reasons ranging from patriotism to renewal, heritage to civic duty. The most eager are the newest Americans: 84% of those born outside the U.S. want to sign, and they are the likeliest to frame it as a duty they're honored to shoulder. The Declaration bears 56 signatures, each belonging to a white man of standing, because in 1776 the room was open only to such men. Cyphers makes the case that those 56 names could soon be joined by several million more — the rest of us, who have been waiting just outside that room, ready to come in. Read the full piece here. |
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