logo
In Pulse remembrance, DeSantis leaves out LGBTQ, Hispanic communities that were targets of massacre

In Pulse remembrance, DeSantis leaves out LGBTQ, Hispanic communities that were targets of massacre

Yahoo3 days ago

After years of acknowledging the targets of the 2016 Pulse nightclub massacre — the LGBTQ and Hispanic communities — Gov. Ron DeSantis has omitted them from his official state description of Pulse Remembrance Day.
This year's omission is notable largely because of what DeSantis did in 2019, his first year as governor, when he also didn't include the LGBTQ and Hispanic communities.
That year, DeSantis shifted course less than 24 hours later. His office issued a statement that it said corrected the omission, blamed the staff, and said DeSantis himself directed that the LGBTQ and Hispanic communities be added.
In intervening years, his annual memorandum directing flags be flown at half staff in commemoration of Pulse Remembrance Day include the LGBTQ and Hispanic communities.
Thursday is Pulse Remembrance Day marking the anniversary of the June 12, 2016, massacre that took place on Latin Night at the LGBTQ club in Orlando. The gunman killed 49 people and wounded 53.
DeSantis' office did not immediately respond to a request for comment Thursday about why this year's memorandum from the governor, 'Flags at Half-Staff in Honor of Pulse Remembrance Day' left out the wording 'against the LGBTQ and Hispanic communities' that has been used since.
State Sen. Carlos Guillermo Smith D-Orlando, the state's first openly LGBTQ Hispanic senator, said there is no way it was accidental.
'The omission was as intentional as it was a slight against the impacted LGBTQ and Hispanic communities. The governor's lack of consistency here shows he cares more about scoring political points in the moment than authentic solidarity with his own constituents,' Smith said.
The senator said he didn't want to 'focus on the governor's bigotry and exclusion. That's already known.' Instead, he said, Thursday should be 'about remembering the 49 lives taken by gun violence' and their families.
State Sen. Shevrin Jones, a Miami Gardens Democrat and the first openly LGBTQ member of the Florida Senate, said the omission was 'deeply disappointing, but unfortunately not surprising. Governor DeSantis continues to erase or attempt to erase the very communities most impacted by the Pulse tragedy. To remember Pulse without naming the LGBTQ+ and Hispanic lives lost is to rewrite history.'
This year's change comes as the national political environment has changed rapidly since President Donald Trump was elected to a second term in November and took office in January. Trump has instituted a nationwide pullback of efforts to acknowledge or promote, diversity, equity and inclusion, which includes the LGBTQ and Hispanic communities.
Trump and his MAGA movement view DEI efforts as discriminatory against white people.
Unlike DeSantis, U.S. Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., included both communities in his statement on Thursday.
'It's been nine years since the tragic attack at Pulse Nightclub, where 49 innocent lives were taken in an act of terror targeting Orlando's LGBTQ and Hispanic communities,' Scott began.
Corporations pull back from LGBTQ Pride sponsorships, affecting South Florida events
In marking Pulse massacre anniversary, some politicians downplay LGBT community
David Jolly launches campaign for Florida governor. Focus is on affordability, broadening Democratic base.
Broward Democrats urged to summon all their energy to combat Trump and look for 2026 wins
Visibility, acceptance, influence have soared in 40 years since Broward activists founded Dolphin Democrats LGBTQ political club
Now the state's senior senator, Scott was governor at the time of the Pulse massacre. 'I still remember the days and weeks that followed, sitting with grieving families and loved ones, feeling the heartbreak and loss that will never fully heal. That horrible night was meant to spread fear and hatred, but instead, it united Floridians.'
A formal Senate resolution, introduced by Scott and joined by U.S. Sen. Ashley Moody, R-Fla., referred to it as an 'attack on the LGBTQ community, the Hispanic community, the City of Orlando, the State of Florida, and the United States.'
But Moody, who DeSantis appointed to fill a Senate vacancy this year, was closer to the governor than Scott in her statement, which referred to the '49 innocent victims killed in the despicable attack at Pulse nightclub in Orlando.'
Smith and Jones both pointed to Senate President Ben Albritton, a Republican. Albritton reposted Smith's social media post, as did the official social media account of the Republican-controlled Florida Senate, that marked '9 years since 49 angels were taken at Pulse nightclub and Orlando's LGBTQ and Latino community were shattered by grief.'
The 2025 DeSantis memorandum ordering lags at half staff to commemorate Pulse Remembrance Day was virtually identical to what he issued almost every year since he took office, with one exception.
Last year's memorandum begins: 'Eight years ago, on June 12, 2016, a shooter claiming alliance to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant committed a horrific act of terrorism against the LGBTQ and Hispanic communities at Pulse Nightclub in Orlando, Florida.'
This year's memorandum begins: 'Nine years ago, on June 12, 2016, a shooter claiming alliance to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant committed a horrific act of terrorism at Pulse Nightclub in Orlando, Florida.'
After the 2019 omission, the governor's office announced that, 'Governor Ron DeSantis has issued a corrected version of today's proclamation (see attached). Staff made an error in the previous version. The Governor has directed that the proclamation be re-issued, including a direct reference to our LGBTQ and Hispanic communities.'
Anthony Man can be reached at aman@sunsentinel.com and can be found @browardpolitics on Bluesky, Threads, Facebook and Mastodon.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Israeli Ambassador: ‘Objective is not to contain the war' but ‘win the war' against Iran
Israeli Ambassador: ‘Objective is not to contain the war' but ‘win the war' against Iran

The Hill

time7 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Israeli Ambassador: ‘Objective is not to contain the war' but ‘win the war' against Iran

Israeli ambassador to the United States, Yechiel Leiter, said the goal in the war against Iran is not to contain it but to win it, as the two countries continue to exchange strikes for a third day. During an appearance on ABC's 'This Week,' host Martha Raddatz asked Leiter how Israel would avoid escalating and attempt to contain the war. 'Martha, the objective is not to contain the war,' Leiter responded. 'The objective is to win the war.' 'Eighty years ago, we had a little man with a mustache running around Europe that nobody believed him when he said he was going to destroy the Jewish people,' he continued. 'We lost 6 million. Now we've got a crazed new Hitler running around the Middle East saying he's going to destroy us. 'We have to take him at face value… He's got a concrete plan to destroy us.' Her comments come after Israel and Iran continued to exchange airstrikes on Sunday. Another round of U.S.-Iranian nuclear talks was scheduled in Muscat, Oman, but was cancelled amid the fighting. When Raddatz mentioned that Trump did not want Israel to strike Iran because it would 'blow it,' Leiter said Trump was 'congratulatory about our strike,' noting that he had been given a 'heads-up' by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. When pushed further on whether Israel would accept a deal between Iran and Israel, Leiter said not unless Iran is willing to halt the nuclear program entirely. 'He wants the nuclear program in Iran to be halted in its entirety,' Leiter said. 'He said it very clearly: dismantle the centrifuges, dismantle the infrastructure, and stop in total the enrichment of uranium. So, if that can be achieved through negotiation, so be it. We'll be very happy. But it hasn't been.'

Trump wary of increasing US involvement as Israel-Iran conflict escalates
Trump wary of increasing US involvement as Israel-Iran conflict escalates

CNN

time8 minutes ago

  • CNN

Trump wary of increasing US involvement as Israel-Iran conflict escalates

Amid ongoing waves of tit-for-tat strikes between Israel and Iran, President Donald Trump is publicly and privately making clear his desire to keep the United States out of the fray for now, wary of becoming bogged in another Middle East war and highly attuned to the changing politics of his party. Sources familiar with the matter say Israel has spoken with the US about possibly increasing its level of involvement, though one Israeli official cautioned those conversation have not yet included 'practical' discussions of the finer details. And while Trump hopes to avoid a prolonged conflict that could further destabilize the Middle East, some in the administration recognize that American military assistance may help Israel conclude its objectives more quickly, the sources said. 'We're not involved in it. It's possible we could get involved. But we are not at this moment involved,' Trump told ABC News on Sunday morning. The competing interests have created a complicated dynamic for a president eager to make good on his pledge to bring peace to the world's troubled regions. Since Israel launched its first attack early Friday morning, the US has offered defensive support to Israel intercepting an onslaught of Iranian reprisal strikes. But Trump has stopped well short of joining Israel's military in its attempts to dismantle Iran's nuclear facilities, resisting pressure from fellow Republicans to join the fight. He said in a social media post Saturday that he felt the conflict 'should end' as he continues to hold out hope for a negotiated agreement that would curb Tehran's nuclear ambitions, even after planned talks this weekend in Oman between the US and Iranian negotiating teams were called off. At stake is Trump's promise to act as a global peacemaker — or, as he told his inaugural crowd in January, to 'bring a new spirit of unity to a world that has been angry, violent and totally unpredictable.' That vow has already been tested by his inability to bring about an end to the Ukraine conflict and halting efforts to stop the fighting in Gaza. Now, as a new flashpoint is threatening to spiral out of control on Trump's watch, the commander-in-chief is attempting to limit US involvement. 'The U.S. had nothing to do with the attack on Iran, tonight,' Trump wrote on Truth Social late Saturday amid a fresh round of attacks in the region. 'If we are attacked in any way, shape or form by Iran, the full strength and might of the U.S. Armed Forces will come down on you at levels never seen before. However, we can easily get a deal done between Iran and Israel, and end this bloody conflict!!!' The post sent the message that Trump's line for getting more directly involved in Israel's assaults would be an attack on American facilities or personnel in the region. Short of that, the US role in the conflict so far has largely been defensive. The Israeli operation against Iran is expected to take 'weeks, not days' and is moving forward with implicit US approval, according to White House and Israeli officials. The Trump administration has not critiqued the weeks-long timeframe in private discussions, an Israeli official told CNN. A White House official said the administration was aware and implicitly supportive of Israel's plans. When asked about how long the conflict could continue, the official said it depended on Iran's response. 'The Trump administration firmly believes this can be solved by continuing negotiations with the US,' the official said, adding that the US was not going to direct Israel to do anything but defend itself. American military planners have long had prepared options for joint US-Israeli actions against Iranian facilities should a US president ultimately decide to try taking out Iran's nuclear facilities, some of which are buried deep underground. There is little to indicate Trump has come close to approving such options, however, and according to an Israeli official, the possibility of offensive US support for Israel's strikes inside Iran had not been discussed on a 'practical basis.' 'We are not there, on a practical basis,' the Israeli official said. 'If at some point, the United States decides to take an offensive role, I don't think we'll be in a position to try and talk them out of it – but that's not our ask,' the official said, adding that such a move would be a sovereign decision of the US. The official explained that the endgame is to make sure that Iran is 'no longer an existential threat' to Israel, with both its nuclear and ballistic missiles program. 'If it's done in conjunction with allies, fine, but if it's not done in conjunction with allies, we have to do it ourselves,' the official said. Inside the White House, there continues to be heavy skepticism about getting involved in the conflict further, according to multiple officials familiar with the matter. Trump remains concerned about getting dragged into a war he didn't start and wanted to avoid, and is acutely aware of the complicated politics at play, those officials said. Though he publicly warned Israel against launching an attack on Iran ahead of Friday's strikes, he said afterward he was supportive of the effort and well aware that it was being planned. Prev Next Trump has long promised not to engage in 'nation building' adventurism overseas, decrying his predecessors for sending American troops to die in wars that generated little benefit back home. 'For at least two decades, political leaders from both parties have dragged our military into missions it was never meant to be' a part of, said Trump told graduating cadets at West Point last month. 'They sent our warriors on nation-building crusades to nations that wanted nothing to do with us, led by leaders that didn't have a clue in distant lands,' he said, vowing to never repeat the mistake. Now, however, he is under pressure from some of his Republican allies to take a more interventionist role. 'If diplomacy fails, going all in for Israel shows that America is back as a reliable ally and a strong force against oppression. It would strengthen our hand in all corners of the world, as well as all other conflicts we face,' Sen. Lindsey Graham wrote on X last week.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store