DeSantis rips ‘smear merchants’ in media following ’60 Minutes’ segment
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) tore into journalists working for CBS News, calling them “smear merchants” and accusing them of peddling a “horse manure” narrative about the coronavirus vaccine rollout in his state.
“These are smear merchants. That’s why nobody trusts corporate media. They are a disaster in what they are doing,” DeSantis said during a press conference in Panama City on Tuesday morning. “They knew what they were doing was a lie.”
“It’s wrong. It’s a fake narrative,” DeSantis told Alfonsi. “I just disabused you of the narrative, and you don’t care about the facts because obviously I just laid it out for you in a way that is irrefutable. So clearly it’s not.”
Governor @RonDeSantisFL Blasts 60 Minutes & Corporate Media
“They cut out everything that showed that their narrative was a piece of horse manure.”
“I know corporate media thinks that they can just run over people, you ain’t running over this Governor. I’m punching back.” pic.twitter.com/EpZYW3PwYU
— The Columbia Bugle (@ColumbiaBugle) April 6, 2021
Defenders of the governor and some media critics accused CBS News of selectively editing DeSantis’s comments to exclude a more thorough explanation of how the state government decided to award the contract to the grocery chain.
In a statement on Tuesday afternoon, CBS News shot down DeSantis’s criticism and said its reporting “speaks for itself.”
“When Florida state data revealed people of color were vaccinated at a much lower rate than their wealthier neighbors, 60 Minutes reported the facts surrounding the vaccine’s rollout, which is controlled by the governor,” the network said in a statement. “We requested and conducted interviews with dozens of sources and authorities involved. We requested an interview with Gov. Ron DeSantis, he declined; We spoke to State Emergency Management Director Jared Moskowitz twice, but he declined to be interviewed on camera for our story until well after our deadline.”
CBS said the governor’s claim that its journalists ignored his administration’s perspective is “untrue.”
“Counter to his statement yesterday, we also spoke on the record with Palm Beach County Mayor David Kerner. For over 50 years, the facts reported by 60 Minutes have often stirred debate and prompted strong reactions,” the company said.
DeSantis had claimed 60 Minutes did not seek comment from the key players involved in his vaccination rollout program.
“I know corporate media thinks that they can just run over people. You ain’t running over this governor,” he said. “I’m punching back.”
DeSantis is up for reelection next year and is widely expected to consider a run for the Republican nomination for president in 2024.
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