When Ron DeSantis entered Congress, he joined the Freedom Caucus, the far-right members of the House. His very first vote was in opposition to aid for the victims of Hurricane Sandy, which pummeled New York City and the New Jersey coast.
As a freshman congressman in 2013, Ron DeSantis was unambiguous: A federal bailout for the New York region after Hurricane Sandy was an irresponsible boondoggle, a symbol of the “put it on the credit card mentality” he had come to Washington to oppose.
But any hurricane that harmed a Red state got his vote. Four years after opposing federal aid for Sandy relief, he supported aid for victims of Hurricane Irma, which affected his own state.
The Washington Post wrote about GOP hypocrisy on hurricane relief. When a hurricane hits a Red state, they are for it. In the rare instance when the disaster is in a Blue state, not so much.
The GOP movement to question spending on disaster relief began to pick up amid the debate over Hurricane Katrina aid in 2005. Only 11 House Republicans voted against the $50 billion-plus package, but others cautioned that they’d be drawing a harder line moving forward, particularly if the spending wasn’t offset with cuts elsewhere.
“Congress must ensure that a catastrophe of nature does not become a catastrophe of debt for our children and grandchildren,” said future vice president Mike Pence, then a congressman from Indiana.
After the tea party movement took hold around 2010, members began to hold that line. A $9.7 billion flood relief bill for Hurricane Sandy was considered noncontroversial, even passing by voice vote in the Senate. But 67 House Republicans voted against it, including DeSantis.
Then came a larger, $50 billion Sandy bill. Fully 36 Senate Republicans voted against it, as did 179 House Republicans — the vast majority of GOP contingents in both chambers (again including DeSantis). They objected not just because the spending wasn’t offset, but because they viewed it as too large and not sufficiently targeted in scope or timing to truly constitute hurricane relief.
By the time 2017 rolled around, though, DeSantis wasn’t the only one who didn’t seem to be holding as hard a line. Despite the bill lacking such spending offsets, the GOP “no” votes on a $36.5 billion aid bill for Hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria numbered only 17 in the Senate and 69 in the House.
Such votes show how malleable such principled stands can be, depending on where disaster strikes.
For instance, only three of 18 House Republicans from Florida voted for the larger Sandy bill, but every one of them voted for the 2017 bill that included aid for their home state.
Likewise, of the 49 House GOP “yes” votes on the larger Sandy bill, nearly half came from states that were directly affected, including every Republican from New York and New Jersey.
One of those New Jersey Republicans was Rep. Scott Garrett, who actually introduced the smaller Sandy bill. Just eight years before, he had been one of those 11 Republicans who voted against the Katrina package.
If you comb through all of these votes, you’ll notice that, the larger Sandy bill aside, lawmakers who come from states that are particularly vulnerable to hurricanes (i.e. along the Gulf Coast) are generally less likely to be among the hard-liners — perhaps owing to the fact that they know their states could be next in line.
That’s where DeSantis’s votes do stand out. On the first Sandy bill, he was one of just two Florida Republicans to vote no, and very few members from the Gulf Coast joined them.
It’s a stand that served notice of his intent to legislate as a tea party conservative; he cast the vote just a day after being sworn in to Congress.
Democrats don’t seem to have the same problem. They typically support disaster aid, even in Red states.
It’s also noteworthy that DeSantis has switched gears in addressing President Biden, whom he usually refers to as “Brandon” (a rightwing synonym for “F… you, Biden”). Now, for the moment, he calls him “Mr.President.” And he can be sure that Democratic President Biden will respond with federal aid for the victims of Hurricane Ian in Florida.
Politifact reports how DeSantis and Rubio voted on hurricane relief.

The current Republican Party is about cruelty and self-regard. The evidence is overwhelming. Desantis and the like believe that such pandering is the ticket to their power. The illiberal revolution will not abate until the public votes these folk out of office.
LikeLike
The Red, White and Blue
DeSadist supports
The Red and the White
For Blue, he imports
The migrants in flight
LikeLike
“And he can be sure that Democratic President Biden will respond with federal aid for the victims of Hurricane Ian in Florida.”
And there in lies the problem . Not that Biden is going to respond with aid as he should but that he will not extract a political pound of flesh while doing it.
LikeLike
I disagree. Biden has to respond positively. It is the right thing to do.
LikeLike
It is also the left thing to do.
LikeLike
But actually not the Right thing to do.
LikeLike
Responding “positively” with aid to Floridians ,yes. Not using this as dagger to attack DeSant-ass and Rube-head unforgivable timidity.
LikeLike
Another case of “It doesn’t matter unless it affects me.”
LikeLike
While DeSadist isn’t an outright climate change denier, he makes it clear that he dismisses much of it as “left wing stuff”.
Just a year ago, in response to a question from a reporter about what his administration was doing with regard to sea level rise , he said
“What I’ve found is, people when they start talking about things like global warming, they typically use that as a pretext to do a bunch of left-wing things that they would want to do anyways. We’re not doing any left-wing stuff,”
Left wing stuff? Like reducing fossil fuel emissions? — something most climate scientists agree is necessary to keep warming and consequent sea level rise in check.
Florida is going to be hit harder than most other states by sea level rise but we can be sure that DeSadist isn’t going to do any “left wing stuff.”
Good to know.
LikeLike
Florida will be hit harder than most states by sea level rise and the increased intensity of hurricanes from warmer waters resulting from climate change.
LikeLike
Fake news buy water front properties now before they are under water!!!! Oops
LikeLike
The sad part is that taxpayers keep shelling out money (over and over) for the wealthy folks who keep building (and rebuilding) along the waterfronts.
Wiped out by a hurricane?
No problem. Simply collect the federal insurance and rebuild in the very same spot.
Wiped out a second (third (fourth)) time?
No problem. Collect the insurance and rebuild in the same spot.
Ad stormium.
And it’s often the same people who criticize the nanny government who are the first in line for the handouts after a storm.
LikeLike
Last week, FedNat became the 6th Florida property-insurance company to go belly up just in 2022.
LikeLike
Perhaps in the future people will run dive charters to visit the former Mar-a-lago.
LikeLike
Companies can advertise to ” Dive for top secret documents!”
LikeLike
Haaaa!!!! I can’t wait to start this business!!!!
LikeLike
They’ll have to rename it from Mar- a- lago (sea to lake) to Mar-a-Mar (sea to sea)
LikeLike
Or just Mar
LikeLike
Advertisement possibility:
“See Mar-a-Mar” (See Sea to Sea)
T shirt possibility:
“I saw Sea to Sea”
LikeLike
The documents bit would be false advertising, ofc, since Trump took the rest of them to Bedminster or wherever.
LikeLike
The Donald Trump Undersea Library
LikeLike
Contents of the Trump Library
Some empty folders labeled Top Secret
The shreds left of the Constitution
Half a billion misspelled tweets
Empty Adderall packages
McDonald’s cheeseburger wrappers
Big toddler-picture-book-style posters made for presidential briefings
A copy of Trump’s code book for sending messages to his handler in Moscow
Orange tan in a can
Receipts for payments to Playboy bunnies, porn stars, shyster lawyers
Plans for world domination and the final solution to the “immigrant problem” by Stephen Miller and Steve Bannon
Bottles of horse tranquilizer and disinfectant
LikeLike
A little false advertisement never hurt anyone.
LikeLike
DeSantis has a vindictive nature. He has directly gone after political adversaries like Rebekah Jones in a direct way. He has used desperate migrants in a political stunt by callously transporting them to blue cities. DeSantis represents division and small minded bias. He will likely win Florida again, but he must not be unleashed on the entire country. Our country needs to heal from its divisive wounds. We do not need a states rights fascist dictating anti-democratic policies in The White House.
LikeLike
DeSantis has fired state and local officials who don’t agree with him.
LikeLike
He has a Rondicktive nature.
Reagan had it too.
Trump has it too, but it’s a Dondicktive nature.
And Cheney just had a Dicktive nature.
LikeLike
Still has.
LikeLike
The Rebekah Jones business will come back to haunt him.
LikeLike
Doubtful.
When did anything folks like DeSantis do ever come back to haunt them?
DeSantis is still going after Jones, by the way.
He always picks on women — when he is not picking on migrant men and boys.
LikeLike
The political ads about this almost write themselves IF (oh, and that’s a really big IF) the Democratic Party finds the courage to write them.
LikeLike
Hypocrisy, they name is GOP
LikeLike
yup
LikeLike
The MAGA RINO controlled Republican Party knows what states will vote for RINO candidates, so these RINOs do whatever they have to, to keep those votes and maintain control of those states RED. The RINOs do not care about the states that won’t vote them into power, but they will if the state is PURPLE instead of BLUE.
Also, Diabolical DeSantis knows he’ll have a much better chance of winning the presidential nomination of the MAGA RINO Party in 2024, if he’s still governor of Florida. He’s up for re-election this year and it seems to be a tight race.
On September 7, 2022, Diabolical DeSantis polled 50% vs Charlie Crist 47%, a slight majority of voters favoring him, according to a poll commissioned by AARP.
Then, according to FiveThirtyEight, on September 20, 2022, Crist was leading +6, 47% for Diabolical DeSantis, and 53% for Christ.
Diabolical DeSantis cares nothing about the people he serves. Everything he does is to win the election and remain governor. Hurricane Iris may have given him what he needs to swing voters back to him. All he has to do is pretend he cares.
Diabolical DeSantis only cares about power, and he’s way more dangerous in power than the ignorant, stupid malignant narcist, infant, Traitor Trump.
LikeLike
https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/polls/governor/2022/florida/
LikeLike
Half the people in Florida support reasonable politics. They want responsive public officials who do what is right. They want all children to go to good schools like they used to in their state. But what they get is a leader who ignores their wishes altogether.
This reminds me of the early days of the Bush II White House, when Bush, who barely got into the presidency, began to govern as though he had a landslide. This might normally have produced a backlash by aggrieved voters, but there began, instead, a march to the right in America that eventually catapulted Trump into office.
The Right of American politics seems to have decided that compromise is a setback. Thus the nation moves inexorably towards government by a minority of the voters without regard to the majority.
LikeLike
Well observed, Roy. DeSantis won by a margin of 0.4% in what was the closest race of the 2018 gubernatorial election cycle.
LikeLike
If not for election tampering by Florida Pugs, he would have lost. You know, the usual shtick–fewer polling places in places where POC live, gerrymandering, late mailing of ballots, etc.
LikeLike
Looks as though his margin will be bigger this time, but not by a lot.
LikeLike
No show Mario is campaigning to make the Ian relief bill as small as possible. He says he won’t vote for it if it includes “pork” – always in the eye of the beholder.
Meanwhile, the state of Florida holds record reserves. Months ago, the lapdog legislature cancelled the gas tax beginning 1 October at the governor’s insistence. Nothing to do with his re-election in November, we are assured.
LikeLike
Meanwhile, the Trumptilian Extreme Court is set to continue its attack on democracy:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/us-supreme-court-to-decide-cases-with-monumental-impact-on-democracy/ar-AA12v32q?ocid=msedgntp&cvid=72aaf3618e8942d4b9948a1429223d3a
LikeLike
And how is this any different from Kamala Harris saying this about hurricane Ian: “It is our lowest-income communities and our communities of color that are most impacted by these extreme conditions and impacted by issues that are not of their own making,” she continued. “So we have to address this in a way that is about giving resources based on equity.”
LikeLike