A Tale Of Two Governors

If you want to know why Florida Governor Ron DeSantis is a leading presidential contender in 2024, and Texas Governor Greg Abbott is not, this story about DeSantis shaking up a college board of trustees provides a big hint.

Governor Ron DeSantis appointed six new members to the New College of Florida’s Board of Trustees on Friday, directing the new conservative majority to reorient a public university that has been led astray by progressive ideologues in recent years.

In 2001, the New College of Florida (NCF) was designated the state’s honors college by the Florida legislature. Since then, the school has increasingly embraced progressive ideological causes, such as expanding DEI initiatives, all while missing its 2022 enrollment goal by 45 percent.

DeSantis’s six appointees are Christopher Rufo, Mark Bauerlein, Matthew Spalding, Charles Kesler, Debra Jenks, and Jason “Eddie” Speir. Several are well-known conservatives.

Rufo is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute and is best known for his activism against critical race theory in K–12 education, corporations, and higher education. Kesler is a senior fellow of the Claremont Institute and editor of the Claremont Review of Books, a quarterly conservative publication of political philosophy, history, and literature. Spalding is vice president of the graduate school of government at Hillsdale College in Washington, D.C., and has published books on the Constitution and the Founding.

“Governor DeSantis is leading the nation in educational reform and post-secondary responsibility,” Spalding said in a statement to National Review. “I am honored by the appointment and look forward to advancing educational excellence and focusing New College on its distinctive mission as the liberal arts honors college of the State of Florida. A good liberal arts education is truly liberating and opens the minds and forms the character of good students and good citizens.”

While they must first be confirmed by the GOP-controlled state senate, the selections are on board with the governor’s plan to refocus NCF. DeSantis chief of staff James Uthmeier says the administration intends to convert the college to a classical model akin to that of Hillsdale College. The Michigan conservative bulwark rejects the neo-Marxist school of thought, including critical race theory and its contention that white supremacy is intrinsic to America’s national fabric and that positive discrimination is necessary to rectify historical racial injustice.

“It is our hope that New College of Florida will become Florida’s classical college, more along the lines of a Hillsdale of the South,” he told National Review.

I have no doubt that Rufo and the other new regents will do their best to purge New College of Florida of the poison of Critical Race Theory and other radical social justice teachings.

Has the Texas Governor ever appointed a true conservative reformer to a college school board? One: Wallace Hall, appointed to the University of Texas System Board of Regents, who dug deep into the scandal of the offspring of the well-connected receiving preferential treatment for admission into college administration programs.

The problem is, Hall was appointed by Rick Perry, and Abbott essentially hung him out to dry, failing to take any action on the scandals he uncovered and failing to reappoint him when his six-year term was up.

From the outside, Abbott seems like a fairly conservative governor, and he is when compared to the likes of Gretchen Whitmer or Gavin Newsom. But at heart, Abbott seems to be a cautious, consensus-driven politician who is reluctant to rock the boat. When it comes to real efforts to sand-blast the social justice rot out of higher education, the contrast between him and DeSantis is night and day.

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6 Responses to “A Tale Of Two Governors”

  1. Eric says:

    YES!

    I’ve been ranting privately about this (lack of revamping the college trustees) for years!

  2. Northern Redneck says:

    The other thing about dealing with any state-supported “educational” (sic?) institution is… CUT OFF THE MONEY!!!! Why can’t red state governors and legislators get up the gumption to do this? In all things leftist, cut off the money and the leftists will shrivel up and blow away (since they have no source of income other than grifting). Just remember how most “indigenous” (sic) communist guerilla insurgencies shriveled up and blew away when the CCCP collapsed and the money thus got cut off.

    Just do it!

  3. The Gaffer says:

    Amen! UT is the very heart of darkness in the state. How else would it be the disgusting traitor Brennan would get paid to speak about ‘ethics'(!) there?

    https://sites.utexas.edu/ngs2016/2017/11/10/former-cia-director-and-ut-alumnus-john-brennan-speaks-on-the-ethos-of-public-service/

  4. Kirk says:

    The Republican Party is complicit in everything that’s gone wrong in this country over the last seventy years. To expect that they’re going to suddenly reform themselves, all at once? Ain’t happening. Hell, to expect this swirling toilet bowl we call a country to “stop the flush” is highly unrealistic; things are only going to get fixed once enough people are miserable enough to make a consensus that what we’re doing ain’t working.

    That is obviously a long, long way off.

  5. JorgXMcKie says:

    In a somewhat defense of Abbot, the Texas governorship is almost certainly the weakest in the US. Arguably his powers are less than that of the Lt Gov.
    However, he does not seem to be leveraging the powers he does have very well.

  6. […] appointed an anti-SJW/anti-CRT slate to the New College of Florida’s Board of […]

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