No, Florida Republicans Do Not Care About Crony Capitalism
The state has 1,288 independent special districts. But we aren't hearing significant GOP complaints about anyone's but Disney's.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis recently signed legislation that strips Walt Disney World of its independent, special-district status after the company objected to the state's new law regarding discussion of sexual orientation or gender identity in classrooms. While the motive behind this action is problematic, some of its supporters argue that there is nothing to fret about, since it was time to revoke a cronyist privilege granted to Disney 50 years ago anyway. But if this is really a fight against cronyism, the legislation goes about it the wrong way.
Cronyism is the unhealthy alliance of business and government. It takes the form of government officials at the state, local, and federal levels granting special privileges to particular companies or industries. These privileges can include special tax breaks, government loans, direct subsidies, or—as in Florida—so-called "special districts." I spend a great deal of my work hours researching the harm cronyism causes to citizens. That's because, as my colleague Matthew Mitchell wrote a decade ago, "Whatever its guise, government-granted privilege [to private businesses] is an extraordinarily destructive force. It misdirects resources, impedes genuine economic progress, breeds corruption, and undermines the legitimacy of both the government and the private sector."
So, is Disney benefiting from a handout that should be stripped away? Yes, Disney certainly has been getting an incredible privilege to act as its own government within the limits of Orange and Osceola counties. For instance, it runs its fire department, administers planning and zoning rules, writes building codes, employs its own inspectors, and is exempted from local regulations and some $200 million in taxes. It levies the remainder of the taxes it owes.
Removing special district status means these types of responsibilities would be absorbed by the two counties in which Walt Disney World sits. Local taxpayers would then shoulder the cost for all municipal services on the property—a cost estimated to be $1 billion. The company, in turn, would be subjected to the same subpar local government services and regulations that most of us are accustomed to. In addition, Florida will be tied up in years of costly litigation to figure out how to disentangle the company from the counties.
But maybe untangling this special treatment is worth the cost. Just don't expect it to result in a fairer regime. Indeed, if this setup is so unacceptable—a claim most Republicans didn't seem to make for the half-century the special district has been in place—it should also be unacceptable for the other 1,844 Florida special districts. Of these, 1,288 are, like Disney, independent districts. But we aren't hearing significant Republican complaints about these.
In other words, GOPers want to continue the practice of extending privileges selectively. What legislators should have done is decide whether any such special districts are a good idea. If so, access to them should be made available to any company that meets certain minimum and clear criteria and denied to any company that does not.
From a local competition perspective, there is some value to the idea of independent special districts. Indeed, they allow people to see the differences between areas where municipal services are run privately (meaning somewhat efficiently) versus the jurisdictions most of us are subjected to, with unfixed potholes in the streets, broken public bathrooms, and unequal police protection.
However, this approach would require consistent thinking and policymaking. And while Florida Republicans are today cheering the removal of Disney's special-district status and the idea that such privileges to large firms are problematic, they had no problem granting Disney's streaming services an unfair exemption from a 2021 tech regulation that imposes daily fines of $250,000 when candidates for statewide office are blocked from a social-media platform for more than 14 days. Lawmakers didn't extend the same exemption to Netflix or Hulu.
This episode should serve as a warning for companies angling to score special privileges from government. Governments give arbitrarily and unfairly, and they take back with equal arbitrariness and unfairness. In addition, when a company's profitability depends heavily on government largesse, it must make sure not to anger its government overlords. Disney obviously failed to do that.
This sad affair has done nothing to change cronyism in the state of Florida, but it has once again exposed the arbitrariness of government in our lives and the cost of depending on its favors.
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No, the FL republicans care about the voters who care about the schools and Disny f'ing with their children. It's about damn time a (R) started going FAAFO! to the culture warriors (Seems appropriate is was a Florida Man).
Fing with, or just plain Fing the children
There are rumors of Disney leaning on their private cops to make pedophile crimes of their employees disappear. If true there's another ace in DeSantis's hand.
There goes Reason with another article critical of Republicans without a single mention of Hunter's laptop. Just more proof that Reason is in on the coverup.
You're probably trying to be facetious but it sounds like you just took the red pill.
Just mocking you and your buddies.
Kind of sad that you don't understand that you're essentially self-mocking.
Also, please put me back on mute. Our mute rankings were very important to most of us here, and a source of pride.
He can't help it if he can't scream about his victimhood daily he loses it.
Our mute rankings were very important to most of us here, and a source of pride.
Most people would think that's a joke, but the sad truth is that you're serious.
Post the Sarcbowl mute list and rankings please.
And remember, you dislike me more than Jesse. Jesse's actually your pal and says nice things about you behind your back. Same with RMac and Sevo. I should be #1 on your list. I'm the meanest mean girl. Not Jesse.
"Most people would think that's a joke"
Most people here were jockeying for positions in the rankings.
What will it take for me to be numero uno on that mute list?
Ideas!
Ideas! Why won't people argue with him honestly!
What are you doing here? Was Fox News on a commercial break?
Yeah, the cover-up of the new Ministry of Truth in the DHS.
Remember folks, unorthodox special privileges for Disney weren't crony capitalism but removing them are.
I also like the totally-not-ownership-warping notion of 'strips'. If I pay you to mow my lawn one time and you do, spend the next two weeks telling me I don't sexualize my children enough, then come back to mow my lawn again and I refuse, I haven't stripped you of your lawn mowing privileges.
But that’s not what happened here at all.
Disney wasn’t asking to mow someone else’s lawn, but their own lawn. On land that they own. And they weren’t asking, but were allowed to do so by legal contract signed in agreement with the state of Florida.
Although I wouldn’t consider Disney a libertarian company at all, the RCID is as libertarian as it gets in the US.
A town in which all traditionally government services are provided and fully paid for those and only those who use them. This is what we all advocate for.
You’ve just advocated for socializing Disney’s roads and other services by shifting the cost from Disney to the taxpayers of Florida.
That’s not very libertarian. Not even to get at the Big Bad Mouse.
That's practically pUniSHinG them.
As she points out, then ignores, this ain't about JUST DISNEY!
^LOL..... Exactly...........
is Disney World necessary?
Let's hope they are pissed off enough to close down the whole thing and move to a more gender fluid accepting state, like Massachusetts, Vermont, or Connecticut. (California already has Disneyland).
Winter business might fall off a bit, but it is about what is right.
Are you sure it's not 'Disney already has a California'.
How will thry manage to clise down the whole thing?
Seriously, people talk about moving Disneyworld like it's something that can be done easily, when in reality it probably cannot be done at all.
Disney has invested tens of billions over decades into one of the largest amusement parks on the planet. Rebuilding it from scratch is simply not possible. Trying to do so would bankrupt the company and be an absurd breach of their fiduciary duty to the stockholders.
"...be an absurd breach of their fiduciary duty to the stockholders."
They already did this when they stepped in the kiddie grooming arena. $50B lost so far.
It is four amusement parks, 2 water parks, a shopping/entertainment district, a sports complex, a few dozen hotels and a number of golf courses. It is not even clear that removing the Reedy Creek Dustrjctwould hurt Disney that much, if at all.
You say that like bankrupting the pedo kingdom would be a bad thing.
No mention of the other special districts being eliminated in the bill?
Strange, it's almost like the narrative is more important than the facts.
TeenReason likes a black and white story.
All five of the others, leaving another 1282 special districts.....
OMG! FL Republicans just did what Democrats live for??????
Throwing Gov-Guns into everything so their [WE] mob can win!!!
"You Republicans have no right to use our Nazi-Regime ideology!"
- speaks every Democrat....
This is like watching the black kettle call the tan pot black... lol..
Right; Republicans shouldn't be using crony capitalist techniques in a culture war ---- but one thing is undeniable.. The right didn't start the war so the left has ZERO justification for gripping about it.
So; In summary; just as soon as you Democrats get rid of your crony capitalism - I'll be happy to support your rejection of Republicans doing the same.
"The state has 1,288 independent special districts. But we aren't hearing significant GOP complaints about anyone's but Disney's."
Did Ms. De Rugy not read that Disney is sui generis in its relation to Florida? Yeah, Florida may have 1287 other special districts, but none that's allowed to ignore Florida's and be entirely autonomous. None of the others--NOT ONE--have that kind of relationship.
As for why no complaints about the other 1287, how many of the them, Ms. de Rugy, are trying to indoctrinate children? In case it's not obvious to you, this isn't really a big seller outside of universities. And the NY/CA axis.
That DeSantis is willing to go all in on this makes him a hero to a lot more people than see him as a villain.
Move from Orlando? Sure....Let's see...that would leave Universal the monopoly. Now people would have to choose between going elsewhere so their kids could be exposed to--what? New wave interpersonal relationships vs...Harry Potter? Please let Disney do that. Pleasepleasepleaseplease!
This may have been a cronyist arrangement, but only the same way as the special autonomous districts in Guatemala whose passing these pages just mourned.
Are any of the remaining 1,287 special districts advocating for grooming elementary school children?
Reason doesn’t have a problem with that.
Fuck Disney World and EPCOT center for that matter, It's an overpriced tourist trap. I was there once, and I'll never go back. Busch Gardens blows it away.
This article makes absolutely no sense. There is a huge difference between an elected water district and Disney getting to run its own government. Legitimate arguments can be had as to whether water utilities ought to be run by special districts, but they are not in the same class of crony capitalism.
In how many of these districts do corporations hold power? Of those, how many are totally dominated by one or two corporations (as opposed to the typical tourism and convention center distinct, which are sometimes run by hotels, but no single operator is dominant)? If there is any district that is for the exclusive benefit of and under the control of a single corporation, let's hear about it and hash it out. But telling me that there are lots special districts does nothing to advance the argument when the vast majority knows that these are water, mosquito control, and the like districts whose control is either via election or by appointment from elected representatives.
Alternate title: No, Libertarians Do Not Care About Crony Capitalism.
Alternate subtitle: The Libertarian Case for Special Government Protection of Companies.
So FL Republicans are "cancelling" Disney for daring to speak out against their radical ideology? If you can't beat 'em, then join 'em, I guess.
Crony capitalism is the opposite of capitalism and therefore is an oxymoron. Business is free market, unrestricted, voluntary, or it's not. If not, it's fascism, a type of socialism which "claims" to protect property rights, but doesn't. Socialistic communism condemns property rights outright.
^WELL SAID +100000000000