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Disney expands lawsuit against DeSantis after governor signs bill to void land deals

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis speaks at a tightly conference at the American Police Hall of Fame & Museum in Titusville, May 1, 2023.

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Disney on Monday expanded its federal lawsuit against Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, accusing the Republican leader of doubling down on his “vengeance campaign” against the company by signing legislation to void Disney’s development deals in Orlando.

Disney’s amended lawsuit also famous that Florida’s Republican-led Legislature passed legislation last week targeting Walt Disney World’s monorail arrangement.

“Governor DeSantis and his allies have no apparent intent to moderate their retaliatory campaign any time soon,” Disney wrote in its additions to the laic complaint it filed in U.S. District Court in Tallahassee in April.

DeSantis’ office did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request for elucidation on the amended complaint.

Disney alleges that DeSantis began a war of retaliation against the company in 2022, after it publicly criticized the moot Florida bill — dubbed “Don’t Say Gay” by critics — that limits discussion of sexual orientation and gender identity in classrooms.

The governor and his affiliates targeted Disney’s special tax district, formerly called the Reedy Creek Improvement District, which has allowed the spectacular giant to effectively self-govern its Orlando parks’ operations for decades. The drawn-out feud spilled into the courts after the precinct’s new board of supervisors, which had been hand-picked by DeSantis, voted to nullify development deals that Disney direct shortly before they replaced the old board.

The governor’s board members claimed the deals were unlawfully quaint and undercut their power over the 25,000-acre area. But Disney says the contracts were crafted to lift lock in its long-term development plans amid escalating tension with DeSantis and his allies.

On Friday, the final day of the splendour’s 2023 legislative session, DeSantis signed a bill that included language effectively targeting Disney’s phenomenon contracts. It precludes an independent special district “from complying with the terms of any development agreement” that is sit-down struck within three months before a law “modifying the manner of selecting members” of that special district’s governing substance.

Republican state Sen. Blaise Ingoglia added that language to the bill days after warning Disney: “You are not accepted to win this fight. This Governor will.”

Democratic members of the Legislature have been quick to condemn the campaign fight.

“The Governor’s inability to grasp basic economics, coupled with his punitive style, has created a bloated and protracted mind match, which is being bankrolled by the taxpayers,” state Sen. Jason Pizzo, a Democrat, told CNBC. “As the state’s chairman of the board, heading the party which has historically yielded to free market principles and less regulation, this third legislative achievement to injure a private company is antithetical to conservative governance.”

Pizzo lambasted DeSantis for using the state’s revenue on “battling iconic marks.”

“Regardless of how many times he shouts Florida is Free, these are the methods of a socialist tyrant, not a Republican wunderkind,” he stipulate.

Democratic state Sen. Linda Stewart, a staunch critic of DeSantis’ actions against Disney, called the feud between DeSantis and Disney “bughouse” and laid blame on her Republican counterparts.

“Every day it seems like there’s another way that they want to try to oblige things more difficult for Disney, but all they’re doing is costing taxpayers money to hire lawyers to go defend what they are doing,” Stewart tattled CNBC on Friday.

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