DeSantis' flip-flop on hurricane relief is a study in right-wing hypocrisy
How encouraging that
It's interesting, though, that DeSantis took exactly the opposite stance a decade ago when he joined other hard-right members of
Still, President
In early 2013,
The aid package drew 67 "no" votes in the House, all from
DeSantis' tune changed last week. After Ian ravaged his state, he asked the Biden administration for emergency federal funding — with, notably, no mention of offsetting cuts to cover the cost. "When people are fighting for their lives, when their whole livelihood is at stake, when they've lost everything," he said in an interview, it's time to "put politics aside."
Fortunately for DeSantis, Biden (unlike DeSantis himself) is consistent in that view. The administration's open-ended vow of federal assistance has been so quick and unreserved that even DeSantis and other
DeSantis, like so many elected
DeSantis won his congressional seat amid a tea party wave that questioned the premise that government should help vulnerable Americans in times of crisis. Assuming DeSantis runs for president, among the first questions voters should ask is: Which DeSantis is he, and why should anyone support a hypocrite?
A version of this editorial first appeared in the
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