Disney is suing Gov. Ron DeSantis and is accusing him of trying to 'weaponize government power' over the company
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The suit, filed by Walt Disney Parks and Resorts US, Inc., alleges that DeSantis and his office have engaged in "a targeted campaign of government retaliation" against Disney that was "orchestrated at every step by Governor DeSantis as punishment for Disney's protected speech."
The suit alleges that DeSantis' continued action against Disney "threatens Disney's business operations, jeopardizes its economic future in the region, and violates its constitutional rights."
The Walt Disney Studios is headquartered in Burbank, California, but the company holds powerful sway in Florida through Walt Disney World, which has roughly 80,000 employees and is the state's biggest tourist attraction.
The latest move by the company is an escalation after DeSantis threatened new changes to Disney's special tax district, with help from both the Florida legislature and the board he appointed to oversee it. He even floated the idea of building a state prison on the 40 square miles of land that borders the resort and theme park.
Last week, DeSantis' newly appointed board said "nothing is off the table" as they take on a major overhaul of the area. In the mix were higher taxes, more regulations, building workforce affordable housing, and exploring the sale of utilities the district owns.
The DeSantis-Disney feud started when the company's executives publicly pledged to work to repeal a DeSantis-backed schools curriculum bill that Democrats have termed "Don't Say Gay."
The initial law at the center of the dispute, formally known as the Parental Rights in Education Act, banned classroom instruction about gender identity and sexual orientation for up to third grade. Last week, the DeSantis administration expanded it to 12th grade, limiting discussions to sex ed classes or those "required by existing state standards."
As retaliation, DeSantis took aim at a decades-long provision that gives Disney special self-governing privileges in Florida. Unlike rival parks Universal Studios and Sea World, Disney doesn't have to run their plans by zoning commissions or building-inspection departments. This makes their operations run more efficiently, saving them time and money.
To subvert DeSantis, Disney stealthily made a deal with the previous board that controlled the district, one that would allow the theme park and resort to maintain control of its land, virtually in perpetuity.
Disney filed the lawsuit as DeSantis was out of the US, on an international business trip that included a stop in Tokyo, Japan.
The lawsuit also came shortly after another public meeting with the governor-appointed board that oversees Disney. In that meeting, an attorney for the board argued that Disney had improperly struck its 11th-hour deal to maintain control over its land.
"What our lawyers have told us is that this is — factually and legally — an absolute legal mess," Martin Garcia, the chairman of the Central Florida Tourism Oversight District, said. "It will not work."
This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.