The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast - 402. Who Is Ron DeSantis?
Episode Date: December 4, 2023Dr. Jordan B Peterson sits down with the 46th governor of Florida and 2024 presidential candidate Ron DeSantis. They discuss his working-class upbringing, the fundamentals of team building, the drasti...c need for government reduction, and how Florida might work as a national blueprint post 2024. Ron DeSantis is an American politician in the Republican party. He is a veteran from the U.S. Navy and is currently serving as the 46th governor of Florida (since 2019). DeSantis was initially a member of Congress elected in 2012, 2014, and 2016. He was a founding member of the Freedom Caucus, a Right-wing congressional caucus formed by conservatives and Tea Party members alike. DeSantis was an avid supporter of Donald Trump during his first campaign and is now running squarely against him for the 2024 presidential elections.  - Links - For Ron DeSantis: On X https://twitter.com/RonDeSantis?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor On Youtube https://www.youtube.com/c/rondesantisfl On Instagram https://www.instagram.com/flgovrondesantis/ Campaign site https://rondesantis.com/Â
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I had the privilege of talking today to Governor Ron DeSantis, who's running for president
on the Republican slate.
I tried to tilt the discussion more towards the personal,
my impression with Governor DeSantis is that he's established himself already as a credible policy
advocate and a credible administrator, and that's no small deal.
He and also is someone who's willing and able to take the flock associated with making difficult political decisions,
but I had the sense that I didn't really know him
personally, and I believe that that's a sense that shared by many people.
And so a lot of what we did with the conversation today was to get to know
Governor DeSantis at a personal level.
And so I hope that all of you who are watching listening find that useful and interesting as I did.
So Governor DeSantis, we met, I think it was probably more than a year ago, at the Governor's
mansion.
Now, we had bumped into each other a couple of times at some different speaking events,
but never really had a chance to sit down and talk.
And, you know, we got to know each other a little bit over breakfast, you know, and I was struck by how welcoming the event was and how conversational our discussion became
quite rapidly. And, you know, I thought I might walk down that road a little bit farther today.
You've established a good reputation or perhaps a stellar reputation already on the
You've established a good reputation, or perhaps a stellar reputation already on the policy side and with regards to general administrative competence, but it's my sense, at least
to some degree, that people don't know you as well as they might.
And so I thought we might, and that goes for me as well.
And so I thought we might try to redress that today.
So that's what I'm going to aim at and we'll take forays off into the
philosophical and political direction from that, but that's where we'll focus. So the
first thing I'd like to know and to share with everyone who's watching and listening is,
where did you grow up? What was your upbringing like?
So I grew up most of my youth in a town called Dunneed in Florida, which is on the west coast
of Florida in the Tampa St.
Petersburg area. I was actually born in Jacksonville. My mother was a nurse. My father worked for
Nielsen TV ratings, which at that time you actually had to install the Nielsen devices on the
boxes of the Nielsen families. So that was his job. It took us from Jacksonville to Orlando.
And then by the time I was in first grade,
I ended up in Dunneed and Florida.
So my folks were just working class folks.
My dad is from Western Pennsylvania.
His father worked in the steel mills and aliquipa.
And then my mom was from Northeastern Ohio, Youngstown,
which is also very blue collar area.
So that was kind of how I was growing up.
I was somebody that was very involved in baseball
all the way through college,
but certainly as a youth,
it was something that I did pretty religiously.
We were, I went to church every Sunday,
and then as I started to get older,
I started working part-time jobs
to be able to make ends meet.
So it was a good upbringing.
No one would have predicted probably when I showed up at first grade in Dunedin, Florida
that I would have gotten elected governor of the state in 30 years.
But it just shows you I think this country still has a lot to offer, even though we've
got a lot of problems.
I was somebody that was able to work hard and really get ahead from that place
in West Central Florida. How big is town you grew up and done it? Do you need it? How
do you pronounce that? Dunneed. You know, at the time, I would say, it was probably about
30, 30 some thousand. It's grown since then. When I was a kid, it was a lot of strip malls.
Now they've got a nice downtown area, Dunneed, a lot of restaurants.
There's kind of a lot of life for it.
So it's a very cute little place.
Of course, they do have coast on the Gulf of Mexico as well.
And one of the things that we have is the connection to Canada because Dunneed and is
the spring training home of the Toronto Blue Jays.
So growing up as a kid, once it got to spring training
in February in Dunedin, you would see a lot of Ontario license plates around because
the baseball fans would come down, Canadians would come down and the Blue Jays facilities
were all owned by the city of Dunedin. So as a kid growing up, playing baseball, we would
use all the Blue Jays stuff. since it was owned by the city.
My high school team, our home field was the spring training stadium that the Toronto
Blue J's played in when they were doing spring training in Dunedin.
And so that was kind of a unique thing to have, but the connection between Dunedin and
the Toronto Blue J's was something that was a really big deal for the city and really
big deal for a lot of us growing up at the time.
Yeah, well, Canadians are pretty fond of Florida.
All things considered.
It's a great alternative to freezing to death in the dark, fundamentally.
And so now you said something interesting when you were talking about yourself in first
grade, you said that no one would have predicted, for example, that you might grow up to become
governor. You came from a working class background, relatively small town. But that's a striking
thing to say, too. What were you like when you were a little kid? Do you think, and when
did whatever promise you did manifest start to show itself?
Well, my, my, what drove me was, was the athletics.
I mean, primarily baseball, but I started to like all sports as I, as I got older.
And, and that was the thing that we did.
So when, by the time I was 12, my little league team Dunneed in National made it to the
Little League World Series in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, one of four American teams in
the entire country
to make it there.
They have a stadium and everything.
It's kind of the big time for Little League Baseball.
And that put us on the map there.
We had a great high school program when it came time for me to get recruited for college.
I was a good student.
And so I was getting recruited by places including Harvard, Yale, and Princeton.
So Baseball really took me, and I had never been to New England in my life.
So baseball is really what brought me to New England when I ended up going to Yale.
And I would have done baseball for as long as I could have.
And actually all through college and I was the baseball captain my senior year at Yale,
I would have kind of, I would have played as long as I could, but being a big league players tough.
My, I think goal at that point was to stay in baseball, maybe more on the business side
in the front office.
But then when 9-11 happened, that's when I ended up commissioning in the Navy and I kind
of took a different course at that time.
But growing up as a kid, it was really about playing sports
and doing that.
And I had a lot of kids growing up with me who were really involved in it.
We had a lot of good programs, particularly on the baseball side.
So it was fun.
And I didn't, I kind of just took it for granted, but now that I've gotten older and I've
been around the block a little bit, you know, not every community necessarily offers
those opportunities to the kids.
And so we were really fortunate that we had a lot of opportunities to play.
So what position did you play on your baseball team?
So by the time I was in high school in college, I was an outfielder.
And literally, I was one of the three starting pictures on our on our world series team.
And then I would play I'd play the infield when I wasn't, when I wasn't pitching. But my, the one thing I could do is I could hit a fastball. So you could
throw a fastball, 95 miles an hour, I could hit the fastball. As they started to be able to
throw like 86, 87 mile an hour sliders and change, that makes it a little bit more difficult.
But, but I was a dead red hitter. threw me the heat I could hit it. So you look back on your life when you were
young especially on the athletic side obviously with a fair bit of appreciation you said
you took it for granted then so I have two questions about that like what do you think
it was about you or was there something in particular about you that made you an effective team player?
Because people who are
athletically successful have to be skilled in the mechanics of the sport obviously, but to really reach a
profound level of success, you have to be a good team player as well. You have to be someone who helps the other players on your team develop and so forth. And so
what? you have to be someone who helps the other players on your team develop and so forth. And so
and then I'm also curious on the developmental side. So I'm wondering what you brought to the team and also what being engaged in those team enterprises for so long actually did for you.
Well, baseball is an interesting sport because it's both the team is paramount.
I mean, you can't.
It's not an individual sport at all, but at the same time, when you're up at the plate,
that's just you.
No one can swing the bat for you.
You either hit the ball or you don't.
And so it's an individual enterprise in terms of every time you get to the plate four
times a game or however much you do, you've got to make it happen.
But just because you make it happen, there's a larger thing.
I mean, you could be a great hitter, you need good pitching, you need defense, you need
all those things.
So it's an interesting combination of individual achievement, but really needing to have the
supporting cast and the teammates to be able to do it.
So I did learn that at a pretty early age.
And I do think kind of like my job as an executive now,
I understand that I can have the vision,
I can make these great decisions,
but ultimately you need a supporting cast around you
who's gonna implement all this stuff.
You can't just do it by yourself.
And so we have people when,
you know, we're fighting some of the COVID insanity.
I have a surgeon general, Joseph Latapoe,
who carries this out, and he's a leader and all that stuff.
When we respond to things like hurricanes,
yeah, I can say we're gonna rebuild the bridge in three days,
but I've got to have the agencies
that are gonna be nimble and gonna be able to do it.
So I definitely think I learned that.
And I think what I brought was just,
I was a hard worker.
I was somebody that really wanted to be out there a lot.
I enjoyed it.
I enjoyed the camaraderie.
I enjoyed the competition.
And I remember thinking when we went to the World Series
when I was 12, we pretty much did baseball every single day
in the summer all the way through the world
series.
And sometimes it was because we practiced a lot as a team, but even if we didn't have
practice, a lot of us would just be out there and we would be playing on our own.
And I was always one of those guys there.
I would be one of the first to practice.
I'd be one of the last to leave.
I just really enjoyed it and I really enjoyed putting the work in.
And I believe that when you put the work in in a sport like baseball, that you do see
the dividends.
And that's something I've carried with me throughout my life.
When you work hard, when you're prepared, when you know your stuff, you're going to be able
to do better than if you're just out there expecting things to happen for you.
Yeah, well, there's two things I've noticed about political leaders or culture leaders
for that matter who are genuine.
So politics, media, entertainment, surgery actually may be medicine as well.
In general, tends to attract a disproportionate number of people who tilt towards narcissism.
And people are born with their trait personality somewhat intact. And every different combination
of personality traits provides people with certain advantages and certain disadvantages
or temptations. And if you're going to be on the political landscape, you have to be
extroverted, generally speaking. And one of the things that extroversion, especially in combination
with less agreeableness, tilts to people towards is a kind of narcissism. And so there's a lot of
people in the political domain, media, entertainment, as I said, who are in the public eye, who tilt
towards narcissism. But the great leaders that I've seen are people who are very good at listening, who are
very good at building teams, and who might balance their ambition with conscientiousness.
Now it seems to me very clear that you're a conscientious person because you stress hard
work continually.
And you also say that you enjoy it.
And those are hallmarks of someone who's conscientious.
And that's a very good trait personality predictor
of long-term success.
It's the best predictor after general intelligence.
But the team building thing really interests me
because that's something that's crucial,
the ability to build a team and to provide opportunity
to people and to give them responsibility.
Instead of keeping everything for yourself, it's definitely one of the things that distinguishes
narcissistic people from genuine leaders.
And so I've seen political leaders who are confident enough to surround themselves with
people who are even more competent than them, right? Which
is a risk, because if you surround yourself with people whose lives shine brighter than yours,
at least under some circumstances, then that brings with it the risk that you're going to
seem rather dim in comparison. And so what I'm curious about the mechanics of how you go about building a team, how you've
done that in Florida, and what you think you might bring to bear.
If you were in Washington, I read a fair bit about Donald Trump's early year, in first
year, in office, and it was definitely the case that it was hard for him to build a functional
team.
Now, I don't think he really expected to become president, you know, so a lot of that was thrown out
him or dumped on him, although he obviously put his hat in the ring. But I'm very curious
about how you go about building a team because obviously building a team on the federal level
is an unbelievably difficult job. And if it's not done right then, well, all hell's going to break loose.
Yeah, I mean, well, first of all, my view is what Ronald Reagan said,
there's no limit to what we can accomplish if you don't care who gets the credit.
So I'm not out to get credit.
I think when you deliver results, I hope that the other people get credit.
I don't need the credit.
And in fact, when things don't go as well,
one of the things a leader has to do is say,
okay, I'm responsible for that.
So there are things, there are times.
And I think you can't be a really good leader
if you try to micromanage anything.
I mean, you've got to set the vision, set expectations,
and you've got to give people the opportunity to do it
without you picking at them.
And that's the only way I think you can really do well.
The flip side to that though is that sometimes when you delegate like that, the job doesn't
get done and people may do things that are not in line with the vision.
And so would you just have to be able to do, is you just have to take the necessary action
to correct that.
Sometimes you got to replace personnel, sometimes just internal course correction. But I think it's important that you praise the people that
are working for you and public and you censor and private. I don't believe in throwing
people under the bus. I think they got to know that you're going to have their back.
And that's part of what we're, I think there's certain things leadership generally and
particularly in government as an executive. And then I think there's certain things leadership generally and particularly and government as an executive.
And then I think there are certain things that given the moment that we're in coming out
it from a conservative perspective, what does that mean in terms of building a team?
Because I do think it's different how I would build a team in Washington versus how Biden
or Obama are the left because when you're going into place like DC, the hostility
is there for anyone that wants to be a change agent.
They don't want to change the order of things there.
They've accumulated a lot of power.
They're really invested in the status quo.
So if you take an agency like the Department of Justice and you want an attorney general,
any attorney general on the conservative side that's going to go in there and actually
clean house, Washington is not going to like you.
You are going to get hit by the media.
You're going to get smeared by the Washington Post and the New York Times.
And so you just have to understand that.
And what about your internal makeup?
What is your internal makeup?
Are you somebody that realizes that's positive feedback that you must be over the target?
Or are you somebody that wants to be liked by official Washington?
And it's natural for human beings to want to be liked by those that surround them.
But if Washington likes you as a Republican attorney general, that means you're not representing
a threat to the
current order of things.
So part of what I look for is to find people that understand there's going to be blowback
when they're doing the right thing and are going to be happy to kind of wear that as a
badge of honor.
I mean, I, in COVID, our surgeon general, Dr. Joseph Latapoe, he came from UCLA, had a great tenure, great, great life,
but he was a COVID critic of the narrative.
And he got marginalized there.
I brought him on to Florida.
I said, listen, you do what exactly what you're doing, but just understand they're going
to come at you.
Are you going to be able to handle it?
He's like, yeah, if I get it into his credit, he wears it as a badge of honor.
But if you're willing, if you're concerned about how the media is going to treat you in
some of these key positions, if that's something that motivates you, you're going to trim your
sales and you're not going to get the job done.
So I think just understanding how the media plays a role in distorting how our government
operates when you're building the team, you really got to have that intestinal fortitude in those key positions.
So how are you able to resist the temptation to be liked?
And how do you tolerate the stress that comes with the attacks that are inevitably going
to amount, some of them reasonable and some of them not so reasonable?
I mean, I've
thought about a political career from time to time, but I've always, well, I haven't chosen
to go down that route for a variety of reasons. It doesn't necessarily seem to me where I would
be most effective, but I also have a certain doubt about my willingness or ability to handle the constant stream of attacks that characterize
a political career.
And so I'm curious about how those sorts of attacks do affect you.
I mean, one of the cardinal personality traits is neuroticism, and that's the proclivity
to experience negative emotion.
And it's a stress tolerance dimension.
And I'm not exactly sure that I have the capacity to tolerate stress in the matter that
might be delivered on the political front.
Now you've certainly taken your fair share of heat and you said that you're trying to
surround yourself with people who are capable of tolerating that and who are also not
necessarily looking to be liked.
So how do you manage that on the personal side of things and how do you, what would you
say, buttress yourself and reinforce yourself, you know, say with regard to your family relationships
and your friendships, maybe your business relationships for that matter so that you
have people around you that help you withstand the storm. Well, part of it, I think, is that I just personally don't really care to read about me or watch
anyone on TV, even when it's good.
It's just not something that I'm interested in.
I'm much more interested in other things.
I don't need to be hearing about me.
I mean, people, you know, there are times when I'll get something nice written or with a
go, did you see this and this?
And I'm like, no, I'm like, I'm just not nice written or would I go, did you see this in this?
And I'm like, no, I'm like, I'm just not, I'm not fishing for for compliments either,
but I just know it goes with the territory.
It's just something that you're going to do, especially when you take on certain sacred
cows.
You can just guarantee and you just see it.
For example, this is a relatively small example, but I've been watching what's going on in
DC with the Fed and this whole idea of a central bank digital currency. example, this is a relatively small example, but I've been watching what's going on in DC
with the Fed and this whole idea of a central bank digital currency. I think that that's very
dangerous. So I did, I, I, in Florida this past year, I said, okay, in Florida, we're not going
to recognize that because if the Fed does it unilaterally, I don't even know if they have
the authority to do that. And I started to say, well, it'll violate your privacy. They want
to get rid of cash crypto, all this stuff. stuff. And it was all true. And then literally within days, Washington Post,
New York Times, all the usual suspects, they start having a spasm. And they're going at me,
oh, he's peddling conspiracy theories, all this stuff. And so I view that as I must
to hit a nerve, they would not all be doing this in unison. This is something that these guys want. And so I'm standing in the way. So they're coming after me. So it's kind
of like in the military, you take the most flak when you're over the target. They don't
tend to go after people on the right who are not a threat to them. If you're just sitting
there and taking up space, they kind of leave you alone. It's only when you're making a
difference and you're leading that they really care.
So, so I just know going in, if you are going to stand for the things that I think need
to be done in this state and throughout the country, you are going to face blowback.
You just have to understand that.
You got to have a thick skin.
And I know it just goes with the territory.
You know how some people are going to react, no matter what.
And that's just the way it is.
So you don't let it get to you.
I don't appreciate necessarily if they, you know, go after like my wife or things like
that, but she's very tough too.
And she's just like, look, I get it.
I understand.
And she's very effective on the campaign trail.
So they try to, they try to nicker as much as they can.
But that's just where we are as a society.
The good news is is I think most people get that.
I think most of the attacks fall flat because they understand this is just part of the process.
And Florida, we're show a good example because as governor, I got attacked more than any governor
in the country.
And yet I won the biggest victory that any Republican has ever won in the history of the state
in a governor's race in 2022. So that tells me is there's a lot of garbage that gets circulated out there,
but the public knows a lot of what goes on in the media is deceitful one way or another.
And I do think when you're just out there standing for and speaking the truth, I do think
it permeates through the fog of deceit that our society has become
mired in.
Right.
Well, it is interesting reversal to view the most vicious attacks as indications that
you're actually on the right track.
I mean, obviously that isn't an unhearing guide, but it's an interesting guide.
And it's also an entirely different psychological take on the issue, right?
Instead of being concerned about the fact that you're drawing negative attention and taking
that personally, you said that you're using it as an indication that you've actually
struck to the core of something that matters and that that's actually a positive sign
rather than something that's negative.
That's a useful thing to have in your back pocket.
So let me ask you a little bit, let's go back again to
your early life. And I'm very curious, always curious, with regards to the people that I talk to,
how their interests develop. Now you stress a fair bit, you stress your athletic interests
a fair bit. And we talked already about the influence that had on the way that you conduct yourself and how you build teams.
But I'm curious too.
When did your, first of all, like,
would you say that your interests are primarily political
and pragmatic, or are they more philosophical
and metaphysical with regards to your conservatism?
Because conservatives can be very pragmatic
and detailed oriented, but they can also take a more philosophical tack.
And I'm curious about which side of that you might place yourself, and then also on where
your intellectual and political interests, how did they first make themselves manifest
when you were a young person?
Well, I think it's interesting because clearly when you're actually in a position of executive
authority, you have to have a certain level of pragmatism because there's different things
that come up and you've got to be able to improvise with new situations.
Now you bring to that, I think, ideally, a solid philosophical foundation that you're
able to parse things through.
But for me, so when I got to college, for example, I didn't even know colleges were liberal
at the time.
And especially like a place like Yale, I guess I thought like an Ivy League school everyone
was going to be wearing like a suit and tie and everything.
I thought it was actually going to be more conservative in terms of that.
Well, I got there.
It was a rude awakening.
You're in the classroom.
A lot of aggressive leftism.
So what I gravitated towards was a real good history, Western civilization, but I think
with an emphasis on the founding of America, because I think that there was a lot of the Western
tradition that fed into what the founding fathers did, both during the American Revolution
and when they created and ratified the US Constitution.
So I started studying all those key sources.
I became very well read and things like the Federalist Papers.
I read the Madison's Diary about the Constitutional Convention pamphlets during the American Revolution.
So for me, in terms of developing a conservative philosophy, it really started in those really
core philosophical enduring truths that mark the founding of the United States of America.
And I think that's something I developed throughout college.
I joke to people and say, because when I'm speaking in front of conservative audiences, the
fact that I graduated
from Yale and Harvard Law School is not necessarily a good thing on its face, given how liberal those
universities are. But what I tell people is, I'm one of the few people that got through both Yale
and Harvard and came out more conservative than when I went in. That's not easy to do. But I think
part of it is because I was gravitating towards things that I think really, really mattered.
I was not doing ideological studies.
I wasn't doing some of the flimflan that you see in modern academia.
I was doing things that represented, I was learning about ideas that have really stood
to test the time.
What did you study specifically at Yale?
What was your undergraduate degree?
History. History. And then at Harvard, what was your undergraduate degree? History, history. And
then at Harvard, you studied law. Okay, so now you came from a working class background.
And, you know, I grew up in a small town in Northern Alberta and in a working class background.
And when I was young, 14, 15, I got attracted to more left ideas, I would say, especially because of people
I'd met, I suppose, who were deeply involved in the labor movement. And at that time, in
Canada, particularly in my home province, most of the people who were on the political
left were actually involved in the labor movement and actually genuinely involved. I mean, there was, you know, the fair share of narcissists on the left then as there is now. But a lot
of the people, especially in leadership positions, had gone through the working class ranks
and had been labor leaders. And so what the reason I'm asking you this is because you grew
up in a working class environment and you, it seems to me that you could have easily tilted towards the more socialist left as a consequence
of being part of the working class,
let's say, and being surrounded by that
or being embedded in that environment.
But you said that when you went to Yale,
you tilted even more strongly in a conservative direction.
What was it about conservatism in particular
that attracted you and also enabled you to develop
and defend your beliefs while you were in these
Ivy League fundamentally liberal slash leftist institutions?
Well, part of it was just a rebellion against
the real militant leftism that I experienced
on campus.
And I had never experienced that before.
I mean, for example, growing up, I didn't know who was a Republican or a Democrat.
It didn't really matter.
I mean, people believed in our country.
They were patriotic.
They were God fearing.
And so you kind of had like a core set of values
that were in common that were different
from partisan allegiances.
So then I get to get to Yale
and one of the Yale's motto is for God,
for country and for Yale.
Well, I get up there and they were not very hospitable
to God or any type of religious faith,
even though it was founded in 1701, because
Harvard was too liberal with its theology.
That's how it was founded.
They had totally walked away from any of that.
And then for a country, they would mostly bash the United States.
You know, you'd hear people blaming America for this or that.
There was a view of communism and Marxism that was very favorable. And I'm
just thinking to myself, you know, there was a hundred million person body count because
of Marxism, Leninism in the 20th century. And yet that's something that they're just
papering over. So I just found the whole thing to be very unappetizing. And then I was somebody
coming in, I was patriotic, I was God fearing, and I may not
have necessarily had a firm political philosophy, but that definitely pushed me away from that. I'm
like, you know what, I don't know what I am, but I'm definitely not, definitely not that for sure.
And then I think just when you're, when you're studying ideas that really matter, I mean, some of
some of these ideas that mark the founding of the United States are really infectious ideas about liberty, about the proper role of government, written
constitutions, and those are things. Okay, that's my foundation. That's what I think matters.
And then how do you apply that more in terms of contemporary? And I'm like, well, look,
this is the philosophical tradition that we're supposed to want to conserve
in terms of being conservatives, that the founding fathers on the big things got right.
We're supposed to want to preserve that and preserve freedom.
So by the time I graduated, there was no chance that I was ever going to end up on the political
left.
But it's interesting.
When I look back at Yale, I was playing
baseball. I had a lot of friends playing sports. I was also working a lot of part time jobs.
Anything I could do just to help make ends meet, I was by the time I graduated, I was considered
the most employable kid at Yale because anytime someone needed anything, you know, if I can
make six or seven bucks here or there, I would do it and I could get people to come.
And it just, it turns out that by most of what is animated there, the people that were
in kind of my socioeconomic sphere tended to be much more patriotic, tended to be, and
I don't know if I viewed it this way at the time, but tended to probably be more conservative,
whereas a lot of the anti-Americanism and the militant
leftism tended to be driven by a lot of the trust fund kids, kids that had grown up and a
lot of inherited wealth.
And I don't know if this is their way to just rebel, but there was definitely a very wealthy
tilt towards the people that were on the far left.
And maybe that was my first introduction to kind of left wing
elites that are advocating these things. Now, they didn't always want to live by what
they were advocating, but they did strongly advocate for those left wing positions.
Yeah, well, one of the things that I noticed about the more activist types at, because
I taught at Harvard for a while at the Ivy League institutions
was that there was a sense of wanting to have too much.
Like it was just too much for me to see when I went to Boston that you had young people
who were simultaneously in a position to place themselves among the eventually lead to the country, which is what's really laying
at your feet once you're in an institution like Harvard or Yale. And he also wanted to accrue
all the moral benefit of being allied with the oppressed. You know, I thought,
Jesus, guys, you know, you're really asking for a bit too much here because on the one hand,
you're already clearly part of what's going to be the ruling elite. And that's especially true if you also come from a wealthy background.
And you want all the moral virtue that accrues to someone who's simultaneously oppressed
or an so-called ally of the oppressed. And the hypocrisy in that I found extraordinarily
grating and I mean that's continued to this day. And so, what do you think that the founding principles of the United States have to offer
to working-class people as an alternative to the utopian vision put forward by the radical
leftists?
I mean, hypothetically, communism and these terrible systems that emerged in the 20th century
were aimed at the working class, right? Workers of the world unite. You have nothing to lose,
but your chains, it turns out the chains you're going to be put in by the radical leftists
are a lot thicker than the ones you abandoned, but we could leave that aside for the moment.
Why do you think that you found the principles on which the US was founded more
attractive and particularly what makes the more attractive and useful to people who are
genuinely of a working class derivation?
Well, look, there's a limited role for government to play and there's a limited role for ruling
elites.
And I think when you look at things like communism,
you're right, the chains are even thicker
for the working class,
but man, the entrenched elite class,
they do very, very well.
And they live very high on the hog.
And you saw that.
I think when we understand what role government has played
and holding people back,
a more limited government provides more opportunity.
I mean, some of that is just what's the proper scope and power of the federal government.
For example, now you have a movement through the bureaucracy not even legislated by Congress
to force everyone to buy an electric vehicle. Well, if you're somebody that is a truck driver or plumber making a pretty good
living, do you really want that type of vehicle? How much more is that going to cost you all
these other things? That seems to not be much of an issue for the people driving these
policies. They have their agenda and they basically want people to be thankful that
they're able to participate with that agenda, even though
it's making them worse off. That's part of why you see the White House press secretary
every day, gaslight the public saying how good things are with the economy when people are
falling further and further behind. They want people to act like that they should be thankful
for what's going on, even though we know it's not. So part of it is making sure power is exercise in accordance with the constitution, which
it is not right now.
You have a bureaucracy that is untethered to the original understanding of the constitution.
A lot of the most important things that affect people's lives are done not by members of
Congress who you can hire and fire during election season, but by unelected bureaucrats.
So I think that's a problem.
The second thing is, is just there's a limit to what central planning can do. We saw the
great society and the war on poverty in the 1960s, where they said, look, if we just have
these smart people and these government bureaus, we put money into it, they're going to be
able to eliminate poverty
in this country, and this will just be a great, great social triumph.
Well, what ended up happening was they ended up creating a culture of dependency.
They made it more difficult for people to rise out of those circumstances, and they facilitated
dysfunction that we're still living with this very, very day. So I think it's just a skepticism of government being able to do all these things, to change
and mold society in the way they do, and also a skepticism about government power being
exercised in big ways by unelected bureaucrats. I was talking to a European friend of mine yesterday,
and she pointed out that now in Europe,
essentially 55% of what people earn goes to taxation.
And I thought, well, that's very interesting
because really what it means is that
people have given up 55% of the opportunity that presents itself to them in life, to the,
to the, what would you say, to the machinations of the people who are taking their money.
And now it's more than half of what they make.
Now, on the one hand, you might say, well, that's a good deal because look at all the things
that the state does for you. But
on the other hand, you might say, well, every single thing the state hypothetically does for you is
power, responsibility, and opportunity that has been taken away from you, that you can no longer
exercise yourself locally. So that takes a fair bit of the meaning out of your life, right?
I mean, if it's on you to do things properly, then that gives you something genuine and worthwhile to do.
And if that's handed down to you from the top down, then you're in an infantile and dependent condition.
You talked about a culture of dependency, and that actually hollows you out.
So as the state becomes more tyrannical, people become more slavish.
And that's very hard on them,
existentially too, because it deprives them of meaning.
And so I'm very curious though,
if you look at this situation historically,
this is how it appears to me,
people who promote limited government in principle principle and who want to devolve responsibility
back to local citizenry in keeping with their abilities, go to Washington, but the bloody
government keeps growing hand over fist regardless.
And it doesn't really, if you look at the historical data, it doesn't really seem to matter that
much, whether it's the Republicans or the Democrats in control.
The state just grows and grows and grows at 3 to 5% a year, and no one seems to be able
to trim it back.
And so, have you had any success in doing so at the local level in Florida?
And what have you learned, apart from the fact that you have to take flak if you're
going to attempt it, what have you learned about how the proclivity of gigantic organizations to keep growing can be managed?
Well, we've eliminated two agencies since I've been governor and our cost per state employee is
the lowest in the country per capita. And we have either the lowest or close to
the lowest number of state employees per capita anywhere in the United States. And it's interesting
because when the people flee New York to come to Florida, one of the first in New York's
budget, by the way, we have millions of more people than New York state does now. New
York's budget is twice the size of Florida's budget. And yet the people that move from New York to Florida will tell me how much better the
services are in Florida, easier to get a driver's license, better roads, all these other things.
So it is just the fact that a lot of the government is just not necessary to actually perform
the core functions.
So in Florida, we've actually, even though we've cut taxes, we've run surpluses, we've
paid down almost 25% of our state's debt.
Now, we're proud of that, but I understand the power is much more entrenched in Washington
DC.
I think it is the case, and I think you're right that it's grown regardless, but if you
think about it, we've probably had one administration
since the great society who actually wanted to reduce government, Ronald Reagan. And,
you know, he had, he had some success in restraining domestic, but, but it was tough. But I don't
think we've really had very many administrations that have wanted to curb the size. And part of
it is because when you're at the helm of it, you know, you can wield some
of that power.
And I think that that's attractive to people.
But I would be one that would say we have both two big government in size and maybe
even more importantly, too much government in scope.
So even if you cut the government by 50% of the employees, if the government would still
be getting involved in things through the regulatory state that are more beyond the current
scope, that would still be a problem.
So I think you've got to tackle both.
What you need to do is when you get in there, day one, you have to have all the personnel
ready to go for ratification,
confirmation in the Senate.
That's hundreds and hundreds of people on day one need to be ready to go to all the executive
actions you're going to take, executive orders reversing the, the previous, that's got to
be ready.
And then the legislative road maps got to be ready with the key members of Congress and
day one, you just got to go.
Now you have a lot of leverage that you can use under article two of the Constitution,
Veeza Vee, the bureaucracy.
There'll be a lot of things that we're going to do.
We've previewed some of it.
We may do a larger rollout here in the next few weeks.
But suffice it to say, there's a lot of authority and leverage that presidents have not used
in the past that we would use both to limit the scope and
to downsize the government.
So let me ask you some specific questions, and then I'll close with some general questions.
You said that you reduced two departments, eliminated two departments in Florida, and I was
curious earlier when we were talking about managerial strategies, how you go about trimming and
firing.
I mean, these people whose livelihood you're planning to eradicate have devoted their lives
to their service to their country.
That's one way of thinking about it.
And it's a very difficult thing to handle decreasing the size of an organization.
So how do you justify that morally, let's say? And how do you go
about it practically so that it's actually implementable in work? I mean, obviously you haven't
got enough kickback in Florida to have had the government shut down by widespread strikes,
for example, or rebellions at the administrative level. So how have you managed that and what makes
you think it could scale?
Well, I think Florida we've just been fortunate because it's actually been
been hard to keep people to want to be working in the government because we have a good economy,
a 2.8% unemployment, people have opportunities. A lot of times in some of these agencies,
people are making a sacrifice to be able to serve.
Some of them could be particularly at the higher levels, could probably make more money
in the private sector.
So we were very confident that there would be opportunities in the state of Florida.
That really, I don't think, was as significant of a driving factor.
And then you do have sometimes, when you, so for example, I've said federally, get rid
of the Department of
Energy.
It's not been effective all that.
Now, there are functions in that department that were being done before the department
was established in the late 70s and would still need to be done.
So some of those like, for example, with nuclear, used to be under defense.
And so sometimes when you're reducing a bureaucracy or eliminating a bureaucracy, there may be some
functions.
For example, the Commerce Department. We've said, let's get rid of that. But you have to do the census
and there are certain things you have to do. So some of that will be to reassign. Others will just
be to eliminate. But yes, in fact, if you think about some of the things that we've had to do in Florida,
I've had because our prisons, it was hard to get people to serve as prison guards.
It's not a great job.
The pay was too low.
They could make more working at Walmart
or some of these other places.
So we actually did a big concerted effort
to be able to give bonuses and higher pay
for corrections officers.
And we've been able to do that pretty well,
but we still have more ways to go just because
there's a lot of opportunities in the economy right now in the state of Florida because
our state's growing.
Let's talk about the Department of Education.
Now, you, I'm obviously extremely interested in educational reform.
I mean, I've been shocked, for example, I was shocked as a professor at the University of Toronto to find out that my second year students who'd gone through 14 years of public education, basically were entirely ignorant about everything that happened in the Soviet Union and in Maoist China throughout the entire course of the 20th century. And I know that you've put in place mandates, for example, for that sort
of education to be provided, but you've also been very interested in educational reform. So
I'm curious about what's motivating that and what consequences that might have for your actions
on the federal level. Well, what we've done in Florida, I mean, we've had to really fight Biden because they
want to use federal power to coerce us to do things we don't want to do.
For example, we have women's sports in Florida.
Biological men are not permitted to compete in that.
It's not fair to the women athletes.
And they were Biden threatened to withhold school lunch money for poor kids just because we were protecting women's sports. So they go after whatever they
can. I'm going to get the federal government off the back of the states. We'd like to
just eliminate that department entirely, but at a minimum, if Congress won't do that,
I will certainly be able to just peel back all the, really, it's not the proper role
the federal government to be getting involved
in this stuff.
Now, what we've done in Florida is say,
okay, the state of Florida clearly education
is a very important state interest.
We fund a lot of the education.
We clearly have the authority to provide protections
for the rights of parents.
So for example, you have a right to know
what curriculum is being used in your kids' schools.
Unfortunately, there are pornographic materials
that are getting put into education now.
Parents in Florida can blow the whistle
and that can be removed.
We've also done universal school choice
so that parents can choose, make the best choice
for their kid.
Regardless of their income, that's private,
that's charter, that's public. You name it, we do it. Our test scores have gone up as a result of that because I think
students are in good spots. We've also said no, no to things like critical race theory and gender
ideology. That is not the appropriate thing to be doing in particularly elementary school.
And we focus on the core academic subjects. We've also made a big push
to have more American civics in the classroom. And part of that is the graduating students
now take a test that's modeled after the US citizenship test, that tests their civic knowledge.
But what we understood is like, yeah, I can say they have to know the Federalist papers.
They have to know the Declaration of Independence, the to build rights, all this stuff. And that's great, but you also need teachers that really believe in this and are passionate
about it.
So we created a program for teachers.
They get a $3,000 bonus if they go through.
It's a 50-hour course.
And we got professors from Hillsdale College.
We got people from the Heritage Foundation to come to talk about the intellectual roots
of America. What went into the intellectual roots of America,
what went into the American Revolution of the Constitution. So they're learning about
the Enlightenment, Judeo-Christian tradition, British common law. I mean, everything you can think of,
they're learning about, and it's been really, really good to be able to do that. I think
we have a responsibility to graduate students that have a foundation in what it means to be
a citizen of a republic.
If you're just graduating blank slates, well, that's how you lose freedom.
When our founders created the Constitution, Benjamin Franklin walked out of the convention
in Philadelphia when it was over.
He was asked, did you give us a republic or a monarchy?
And his response was a republic Republican you can keep it because
they understood these things don't run on autopilot. The citizenry has to be engaged in protecting
for preserving freedom. So that's kind of K-12. Now on higher education, we've also leaned
in. And our view is is that publicly funded universities should meet the mission that Florida wants for its taxpayers. And for us, we want rigorous academic
programs.
We want to prepare students to be
good citizens.
We want the pursuit of truth.
We don't want the university to be
hijacked to focus on ideological
indoctrination.
So we've done things at like new
college in Sarasota where I
appointed seven conservatives to
a small liberal arts
college.
They've now taken that more of a direction like Hillsdale College in Michigan.
And the applications are booming because there's a hunger to have academics focused more
on the meat and potatoes of what academics used to be rather than a political agenda.
And then we're doing the same thing like the University of the pandemic used to be rather than a political agenda. And then we're doing the same thing
like the University of Florida.
We now have a Hamilton Center
for public policy where you're
bringing in professors that don't
align with leftist orthodoxy
who are be able to present more
of, I think, a balanced take on
things, give students access to
views that are not necessarily
the politically correct approved views that
marks academia. So that's been really exciting too. But my view is, is these are all of our
institutions. They're not the hobby horse of the political left. And they need to reflect
what the state's mission and interest are with respect to academics.
So I'm going to ask you a couple of questions to close, if you would.
The first is, what challenges, what have you done right and wrong on the campaign trail?
What challenges do you have ahead of you on the campaign trail?
What are you hoping for with regards to your campaign over the next year?
And then more specifically, what are you hoping
to accomplish with your forthcoming debate with Gavin Newsom, the governor of California?
Well, I think it's actually, they're kind of related. I mean, I think that, you know, in a
presidential campaign, a lot of this is trying to generate information flow to the voters. And
in a nationwide thing, things like the corporate media, unfortunately, matter
more than maybe in a statewide election, even a state as big as Florida, I really could
dominate the discourse as governor. I could go to the markets, I, these local markets and
do that. When you're talking about a presidential campaign, I mean, it's just day after day, the
media churn narratives. And so we knew from the day I won reelection in 22, I was a
marked man. We knew they were coming after me. We knew they did not want me to be the nominee.
That wasn't necessarily surprising. But I do think that doing what you can to get into
that flow in ways that are going to be present for voters is really, really important. And
I think we've done a better job of that more recently in the last few months than we
did in the first month or two of the campaign.
And that's kind of the thing with the Newsom.
He said he wanted to debate me, hand it, he asked me to do it.
Some people said, well, Newsom, we know he wants to run, but he's not actually running.
So so why even give him that platform?
And my view is this is going to give me 90 minutes on national television to be able to articulate why conservative policies
have worked in Florida and why they can work nationally in contrast to the failure of
California and how Biden is failing and how more of that would would lead to an acceleration
of the country's decline.
So that's going to give me a good opportunity to be able to reach these voters in ways that
will be meaningful.
So that's just, that's different in a presidential than would be different in these other campaigns.
You just do.
So we're going to be mindful of that.
Now, I do think if you're out of a primary context, the liberal media attacking you, I think does
help you with Republican voters because they'll get defensive.
When you're the nominee, they'll say, wait a minute, they're coming after our guy.
And there is a rally around the flag effect because conservatives just have no trust in
the corporate media at this point that you do have that.
And the primary, it's a little bit different in terms of how all that shakes out.
But definitely, I would say that just the role that media plays and being able to get in
the information flow is a really, really thing.
And of course, there's some people that can dominate that in ways that other candidates
can't.
So you said that your strategy has shifted to some degree in the last few months and that
you think it's become more effective.
So maybe you could elaborate on that a little bit.
So what we've done really, I think probably since the end of the summer is getting involved
in as many different media opportunities as possible.
I didn't really do a lot of the corporate media as governor because I didn't really need
to and I knew they were just trying to distort everything.
We now do that.
I mean, I've done liberal shows, I've gone on all that stuff and we're going to continue
to do that.
I think you just get better churn when you're doing it.
When I've also though noticed is we've spent a lot of time in these early states, particularly
Iowa, which is the first contest, Iowa caucus. And
when you're on the ground there and we visited 98 of 99 counties, I'll finish the 99th
this coming weekend, you do get good information flow with the local, local media. And that's
the thing. It's like, you could be in an area, you get a couple hundred people to come
see you. And that's important. And when they come see us, we're able to shake their hand,
answer their questions.
We went them over,
but you know, you're,
it's the whatever the media is
then putting out to the community.
That's really what's going to be
more influential.
So, so we've gotten in and we've
done a lot of that.
And I think that that's been effective
and we've been able to really build
a big, big basis support in Iowa.
And when you're in a caucus situation, it's going to be cold.
You got to show up at night on a weeknight, and you got to be there for two or three hours.
And so that takes the commitment.
It's not just mailing in a ballot.
So generating the type of people that are really true believers that you know we're going
to show up is key.
And we've created a really good basis support there.
Well, Governor, I know you're on a tight schedule and we have to wrap this up.
There's endless numbers of other questions I would like to ask you.
I guess the last thing I would like to know from you, I suppose, is what makes you think
that you among the Republican contenders are in the best position to be put forward as the Republican
candidate for the next presidential election.
A few reasons.
One, I have a demonstrated record of fighting for people.
We've had a lot of Republicans over the years that basically just cave at the first sign
of opposition to the media.
But I'm also somebody that when I fight, I win these battles. And
yes, win the election. We want a historic victory in Florida. We'd be able to beat Biden
nationally without without question. But winning on all the policy fights, it's one thing to
have a slogan about something, but you actually got to bring it in for a landing. So everything
I talk about is done with an eye to how would I actually get it done, whether it's stopping the border invasion, whether it's reducing the bureaucracy and
taming the deep state, whether it's getting the energy production at max capacity. All
these things are things that we're thinking about. And the final thing is, is, yeah, we
really need a leader. And you need leadership. And that's what we've demonstrated. And
leadership is about doing the right thing when it's not easy.
When the winds it's your back, that's not really a test.
But when you have the wind in your face, when people are coming at you, are you going to
stand for what's right, articulate that vision that people can rally around?
Or are you going to kind of scurry off into your little cubby and hope that you
don't, that you don't get hit with any incoming. And then I have a demonstrated record of leadership.
So people can know that with me as the candidate for the Republicans, when I get in there, January
20th, 2025, we're going to get all of this done. And we're going to have two terms to do
it. And the country is going to be in a much better position. That winning the elections important, but then delivering on the promises, that is the
missing ingredient.
That's what we need to get done and that's what I represent.
Well, thank you very much for your time today, sir.
It's much appreciated.
It was a pleasure to get to know you a bit more.
With any luck, we'll have another opportunity to talk at some point during your campaign
and best of luck on the trail.
You feel they should have you host one of the debates.
I think it would be more informative.
I think you'd ask a lot of good questions.
Maybe we'll see if we can get something done.
Yeah, well, that would be a remarkable opportunity and a genuine privilege.
So I'd certainly be up for that.
Anyways, thank you very much for your time.
I know you're on a tight schedule.
I'm going to let you go. I want to thank everybody who's watching and listening. This is a very important
upcoming presidential election and it's necessary to spend the time required to
to inform yourself about the candidates and about the issues that had because it's a crucial
election. And so thank you to the Daily Wire Plus team
for making this possible and for the camera crew here
in Scottsdale.
And thanks once again, Governor DeSantis,
for your time today.
It's much appreciated.
Thank you.
Take care.
you