DeSantis says he'll veto congressional map passed by House
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — The Republican-dominated Florida House tried — and failed — to please Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis, who tweeted his opposition to proposed congressional maps while representatives were in the process of debating them Friday.
It was unusual move by DeSantis to inject himself in the once-a-decade redrawing of political lines after the federal census is released. DeSantis earlier this session released his own proposal, which would likely eliminate two black plurality districts.
“I will veto the congressional reapportionment plan currently being debated by the House. DOA,” DeSantis tweeted.
DeSantis is running for reelection this year and is considered a potential presidential candidate in 2024.
The House later passed a bill on a 67-47 vote that approved a primary map that was introduced a week ago in an effort to appease the governor's concerns about the constitutionality of the district of U.S. Rep. Al Lawson, an African American, while still trying to maintain a Black plurality district in Jacksonville. The bill also contains a secondary map that largely maintains Lawson's district in case the primary map is found unconstitutional.
“The Florida House of Representatives just got played. We had maps that looked a lot better than what we’re seeing today, and we scrapped all of that to satisfy the whims of our governor," said Democratic state Rep. Carlos Guillermo Smith. “Should we just give the governor a Sharpie? Have at it. Draw your own maps, draw whatever your little heart desires and we will just do this for you."
Republican Rep. Tom Leek, who chairs the House Redistricting Committee, defended DeSantis' right to get involved in the process.
“Some of you don’t think the governor has a place in this. I disagree. The governor constitutionally...
