Recently, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis challenged Vice President Kamala Harris to a debate on the newly implemented African American history standards, and the Florida Legislative Black Caucus is responding.
Members of the Caucus agreed Vice President Harris has rightfully declined to engage in an “unproductive debate on what should be known facts.” The group also stated that since the formulation and implementation of these new state standards, no conversation was had with any members of the Florida Legislative Black Caucus.
“Governor DeSantis has challenged Vice President Kamala Harris to debate the new African American history standards because he believes it will score him points for his ever-failing Presidential bid,” Chair and Hillsborough State Representative Dianne Hart said. “It is obvious that he is not serious about defending or explaining the lies of these standards because not once has he or his office reached out to the members of the FLBC to discuss this curriculum. Not during the formulation nor prior to the implementation. If he is serious about having an actual conversation and hearing why slavery provided no benefit to enslaved people we welcome the opportunity.”
Republican Governor DeSantis invited the Democratic Vice President to debate Florida’s Black history curriculum. The Vice President has been attacking the curriculum as “propoganda” that is replacing history with lies. Governor DeSantis said the Vice President mischaracterized the curriculum and that’s why he wanted to debate her.
“Clearly, Gov. DeSantis is drinking his own Kool-Aid if he continues to claim that enslaved people benefited from slavery and that Florida is number one in the country for education,” Miami State Senator Shevrin Jones. “The ongoing, blatant propaganda from the Governor’s office is insulting to the millions who call Florida home. Try as he might, revisionist history and present won’t resuscitate his flailing presidential campaign.”
“I am a long-standing member of the African American History Task Force and was not informed of the formation of a work group to develop standards on instruction on African American history,” Historian and Orlando State Senator Geraldine Thompson said. “Neither was I invited to join the work group. Clearly the Governor and the Commissioner of Education didn’t want or seek a broad perspective on the standards.”
“This governor has proven, without fail, that he has no interest in protecting Black history, no interest in helping Floridians, and absolutely no interest in anything beyond his ridiculous presidential ambitions,” Secretary and Jacksonville State Senator Tracie Davis said. “Vice President Harris had every right to deny his farce of a debate. Florida’s Commissioner of Education already has a Task Force of African American History experts who were not consulted – instead the job was given to a group of empty yes men and a conservative think tank. If we’re looking for ‘indoctrination of students,’ maybe the governor should look in a mirror.”