Ron DeSantis says police recruitment bonuses target ‘mistreated’ cops, not just the unvaxxed

By A.G. Gancarski
FloridaPolitics.com
October 27, 2021

‘It’s for officers period. It has nothing to do with their vaccination status.’

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis

In Venice Monday, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis made the case for bringing “mistreated” cops to Florida, stressing he intends his recruitment push to target more than just police officers who don’t want COVID-19 shots.

He wants officers who are disgruntled for a variety of reasons, he said, including an inability to “take that environment” in places like New York, Seattle, and Minneapolis, flash points in last year’s street protests in the wake of the George Floyd murder.

“We are 100% excited about saying that anyone that’s being mistreated, if the morale is low, if you can’t take that environment, and we have openings here, you’re going to get an environment where people are going to support you,” DeSantis said.

DeSantis elaborated on his proposal to pay police officers from other states $5,000 to come to Florida, first rolled out in September.

Contrary to reporting in recent days, he stressed he wasn’t just recruiting cops who refused COVID-19 vaccinations as conditions of employment.

“No, no, no, no,” DeSantis said to a reporter Monday. “It’s for officers period. It has nothing to do with their vaccination status. That’s just wrong. I think there was a headline from a corporate outlet. We all know corporate media lies, OK. They do not tell the truth. Assume what they tell you is false and then figure out why they are telling you a false narrative.”

The source of that “false narrative” is from a friendly interview the Governor did on Sunday, offering the latest example of how even soundbites only intended to be consumed by his political base come back to haunt DeSantis.

The Governor appeared on the Fox News Channel Sunday, promoting the $5,000 bonus scheme. Context suggested that unvaxxed cops were part of the recruitment strategy.

“In Florida, not only are we going to want to protect the law enforcement and all the jobs, we’re actually actively working to recruit out-of-state law enforcement because we do have needs in our police and our sheriff’s departments. In the next Legislative Session I’m going to hopefully sign legislation that gives a $5,000 bonus to any out-of-state law enforcement that moves to Florida,” DeSantis said Sunday.

The question from host Maria Bartiromo was framed around vaccine mandates for police and military members, with Bartiromo asking about Chicago cops walking off the job setting up the answer, suggesting to the Washington Post and others that DeSantis ultimately draws a connection between the bonuses and unvaccinated cops. DeSantis has referred to vaccinations as “injections” at various times, meanwhile, further muddling the narrative.

During remarks Monday in Venice, DeSantis noted his administration had hosted vaccination events for first responders earlier this year, further distancing himself from the idea that unvaccinated police officers are the recruitment targets. Rather, the Governor wants cops who feel “mistreated” and who have found constraints in other jurisdictions to be intolerable.

“I put that out there as a proposal months ago and the reason we’re doing it is because people are being treated poorly in Seattle, in Minnesota, in the NYPD. They don’t have support,” DeSantis lamented Monday. “They get criticized if they enforce the law.”

DeSantis added that in San Francisco, where he went this weekend for a fundraising trip, the law isn’t enforced at all and, “you have rampant crime” such as shoplifting

“That’s why we’re doing it. Because morale is low. Morale’s been low for years because of how law enforcement’s been treated. But when you saw all the rioting happening last summer, all the vitriol directed at them, Florida stood up and said we back the blue.”

“We’re looking to capitalize on a lot of communities around the country who have turned their back on law enforcement,” DeSantis added.

The Governor said those who have moved down already say “it’s the best decision they’ve ever made.”

Indeed, DeSantis has been recruiting cops from elsewhere since this summer, road testing tough rhetoric by way of welcoming prospective police officers.

“I do think you will see; I think you’ve already seen. But there are people in these police departments in various other parts of the country who, if they can get a job in Florida, they want to come to Florida to be able to do it,” DeSantis said in Green Cove Springs in July. “Because the culture is better, and they understand they’re going to be supported much more resolutely than what they do.”

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DAVID LOTT
DAVID LOTT(@dave-l)
2 years ago

Another DeSantis hit piece that I have no idea why the FO publishes these articles that have no direct bearing on FB or Nassau County. The FO may not make endorsements but the articles they post with regards to the Governor make the editor’s position clear.

The payment of hiring bonuses is nothing new and is used by the public and private sectors to recruit workers from other geographical areas and industries. School boards have been doing it for years.

Barnes Moore
Barnes Moore(@barnes-moore)
2 years ago
Reply to  DAVID LOTT

Notice that there is no mention that Florida now has the lowest per capita covid cases in the US. That bit of news will be ignored until FO can find a way to spin it to reflect poorly on our great governor.

Richard Norman Kurpiers
Richard Norman Kurpiers (@guest_63004)
2 years ago
Reply to  Barnes Moore

That “bit of news” will need to include that pretty much all states, including Florida, experience roughly 2-month waves. For instance, the states where COVID cases have fallen the most during the past two weeks  — Tennessee, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas, Kentucky, North Carolina — are states that endured huge peaks in mid-September. And the higher the peak — the more people recently infected — the sharper the descent.  So you can hold the applause for DeSantis.

That “bit of news” will also need to include that in all of 2020 — before vaccines essentially eliminated the risk of death for most recipients — 23,384 Floridians died of COVID-19. Now nearly as many — 21,000 and counting — have died in the past four months alone. And another 135 Floridians are still dying, on average, every single day. Again, hold the applause.

And finally, that “bit of news” will need to include that before Delta hit, Florida ranked 26th in the nation for cumulative COVID deaths per capita; now it ranks ninth. What’s more, three of the states above Florida on that list — New Jersey, New York and Massachusetts — suffered the bulk of their deaths right in the beginning of the pandemic, long before vaccinations and other interventions drastically reduced the virus’s deadliness.