'Peter Pan & Wendy' trailer sparks Disney nostalgia with live-action update of animated classic



CNN
 — 

The trailer for Disney’s “Peter Pan & Wendy” – based on the Mouse House’s 1953 animated classic “Peter Pan” – dropped on Tuesday, and it certainly presents a movie that looks far more inclusive than past retellings of the original J.M. Barrie tale.

“But you’re not all boys,” Ever Anderson’s Wendy Darling says to a group of kids in Neverland who tell her they’re the “Lost Boys” in the clip.

Ever Anderson in 'Peter Pan & Wendy.'

Those kids are, in fact, not all boys. Two girls then appear on screen to respond to Wendy’s observation with a simple and spirited, “So!?”

“Blackish” star Yara Shahidi is also seen in the trailer as Tinker Bell, Peter’s fairy friend who accompanies him and the Darlings through Neverland. Shahidi is the first Black woman to portray the tiny fairy on screen.

The movie also stars Alexander Molony in his feature film debut as Peter Pan, and Jude Law as a very creepy-looking Captain Hook, who is seen in the trailer sporting his signature hook, red coat and twisted mustache as he asks Wendy, “Where is Peter Pan?”

Yara Shahidi in 'Peter Pan & Wendy.'

The trailer shows all of the classic figures from the ’53 film, including the Darlings’ beloved dog Nana and a faithful representation of John Darling (Joshua Pickering) in his top hat and rounded spectacles.

An aerial view of the mermaids shimmering and splashing in the sea beneath Wendy and her brothers, who are soaring the skies above, is shown in the trailer. And Tiger Lily, played by Alyssa Wapanatâhk, is seen telling Wendy, “Hold the past in your heart, but where you go from here is up to you.”

Alyssa Wapanatâhk in 'Peter Pan & Wendy.'

From the 1991 cult classic “Hook” starring Robin Williams, Dustin Hoffman and Julia Roberts to NBC’s 2014 “Peter Pan Live” telecast starring Allison Williams and the 2015 “Pan” film, Peter Pan and Wendy’s adventure is a story that’s been previously visualized on screen in countless ways.

The new “Peter Pan & Wendy” presents an inclusive version of the classic tale, one that blends Pan’s fantasy world into a landscape for today.

“Peter Pan & Wendy” will begin streaming on Disney+ on April 28.

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Soros-backed DA cuts deal giving no jail time to 'wasted' bus driver who killed cyclist in crash

A progressive district attorney in Austin, Texas was slammed after he cut a no-jail deal with a bus driver accused of fatally hitting a bicyclist while high on prescription drugs.

Travis County District Attorney Jose Garza’s plea deal with former Austin CapMetro bus driver Mindi Stafford was cited by a retired police officer and local lawyer as another example of the George Soros-backed prosecutor not standing up for crime victims.

Garza’s office agreed earlier this month to allow Stafford to plead down from manslaughter to criminal negligent homicide which had her avoiding time behind bars with a deferred adjudication for seven years and community service, Fox 7 Austin reported.

Stafford was behaving strangely and talking to herself while driving a city bus at the University of Texas-Austin campus in January 2019, before she fatally struck 39-year-old bicyclist Anthony John Diaz, bus passengers told officials. Stafford, who failed a sobriety test at the scene, had a backpack with her that contained four different prescription medications that had side effects that included confusion, dizziness and drowsiness but did not test positive for alcohol or illegal drugs.

Security footage showed that Stafford did not hit the brakes until after striking Diaz, and law enforcement officials said it was clear that the 11 people on the bus at the time saw Diaz before the crash.

SOROS-BACKED PROSECUTOR PUSHED BY MISSOURI AG TO RESIGN HAS HISTORY OF SCANDALS, ALLEGED MISCONDUCT

Tony Diaz, 39, was killed after being struck by a bus driver riding his bike on Jan. 28, 2019.

Tony Diaz, 39, was killed after being struck by a bus driver riding his bike on Jan. 28, 2019. (Fox 7 Austin)

Diaz was dragged under the bus for over 100 feet and was declared dead at the scene.

Attorney Adam Loewy, who represented the Diaz family in a civil case against the city and negotiated an undisclosed settlement, told Fox News Digital that Stafford was “wasted” and “swerving all over the road” while passengers told her to slow down. The plea sent a “clear message” that you won’t get in serious trouble in Austin if you get behind the wheel while inebriated, the attorney claimed.

“This is crazy,” Loewy said. “How do you drive under the influence in a bus, go into the bike lane, plow somebody over and don’t serve a day in jail? I’m not saying that she needs to serve 20 years in prison but maybe a month?”

GEORGE SOROS-FUNDED DAS REPRESENT 20% OF AMERICANS AFTER $40M WAS FUNNELED INTO RACES, REPORT FINDS

Tony Diaz, 39, was an employee of the Fox 7 Austin news station.

Tony Diaz, 39, was an employee of the Fox 7 Austin news station. (Fox 7 Austin)

In September 2022, Garza’s office agreed to give 19-year-old Leo Anthony Carreto-Lopez a 10-day sentence for killing 19-year-old Teresa Gonzales, a passenger in his car, in a drunk driving crash.

Dennis Farris, the president of the Austin Police Retired Officers Association and an Austin police officer for 25 years, told Fox News Digital he does not “understand what’s going on with the DA’s office” and agrees with Loewy that some jail time was necessary in this instance.

“You have somebody who killed somebody while they were impaired, will face zero consequences for what they did,” Farris said. “The person needed to go to jail. They needed to go to prison.”

Garza, a progressive activist with no previous experience as a prosecutor, ran on a platform of “reimagining” policing and prosecuting police officer and was elected as Travis County district attorney in January 2021.

LEFT-WING BILLIONAIRE GEORGE SOROS FUNNELED AT LEAST $131 MILLION TO MEDIA GROUPS FROM 2016-2020, STUDY FINDS

Mindi Stafford pleaded guilty to criminally negligent homicide.

Mindi Stafford pleaded guilty to criminally negligent homicide.

Garza, like many prosecutors by the liberal mega donor across the country, has earned criticism, especially from families of crime victims, for lenient sentencing policies and rising crime. 

You have to start sending a message to the criminals that it’s not okay to commit crimes in Austin and in Travis County,” Farris said. “And if you do, you’re going to go to jail. There are going to be consequences. As long as we quit holding criminals accountable for their actions. They’re gonna keep doing it.”

Loewy told Fox News Digital that he often warns his clients who are involved in crashes where a drunk driver is involved that the district attorney in Travis County is not going to “get any sort of justice on their behalf” and that the families are often upset with how the cases play out.

Travis County District Attorney Jose Garza

Travis County District Attorney Jose Garza (Travis County DA Website)

“Getting civil compensation money is important, but you’re just kind of conditioned to believe in this country that if somebody breaks the law, they’re going to serve jail time for it,” Loewy explained. “Especially if they seriously injure or kill someone. I think it’s extremely painful and I think they’re very aware it’s very political at this point. He has a view of criminal justice which is different than most people’s views and it does upset them, very much so.”

Farris told Fox News Digital that deferred adjudication means that Stafford is essentially on probation for seven years and if she “keeps her nose clean” throughout that period she will have a clean record like “nothing happened.” Farris also warned that this case serves as another example of how the probation system in Travis County is becoming overwhelmed.

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George Soros, seen here delivering a speech during the 2023 Munich Security Conference, backed Kim Gardner's campaigns.

George Soros, seen here delivering a speech during the 2023 Munich Security Conference, backed Kim Gardner’s campaigns. (Open Society Foundations/YouTube/Video screenshot)

“They’re putting a lot of burden on these probation officers who are already overworked to keep up with these criminals who should be in the penitentiary,” Farris said.

“It literally is sending a message to the criminals in Travis County to go ahead and commit crimes, the DA is going to let you off, and you can go back to committing crimes,” Farris said.

DA Garza’s office did not respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital.

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Entenmann's is bringing back its see-through packaging


New York
CNN
 — 

Baked goods company Entenmann’s is bringing back its cellophane window packaging after a two-year absence caused by flood damage at the factory that produces the iconic white and blue cartons.

The cellophane window has been a recognizable feature for more than 70 years, allowing shoppers to view the tasty treats they’re buying.

“Entenmann’s is thrilled to return to our iconic window boxes,” the company said in a statement, adding that the company “always planned” to return to its signature packaging. “We are happy that time has arrived and love that our consumers are excited as well,” it added.

The windows are back.

The windows were temporarily eliminated in September 2021 when its Pennsylvania facility sustained flooding damage from Hurricane Ida. At the time, the company said the flooding “destroyed 5,000 tons of packaging inventory and caused critical damage to the machinery that produces the cartons and boxes.”

Since then, Entenmann’s has used either a photo of the product in place of the window or clear clamshell packaging as a temporary solution.

“You can’t really tell by the photo but I feel personally attacked that Entenmann’s took away the little window & replaced it with a printed picture. Not cool,” tweeted a customer last year. Another person tweeted in rage that the company eliminated the “yum yum” window.

Charles Entenmann, who helped to turn his family’s Long Island, New York, bakery into a baked goods behemoth, died last year. He and his brothers introduced the brand’s see-through packaging in the 1950s to entice shoppers to sample the sweets.

Bimbo Bakeries USA, a unit of Mexican multinational Grupo Bimbo, purchased the company in 2002. Entenmann’s produces more than 100 varieties of baked goods in the United States and makes 1 billion donuts annually.


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CNN's Don Lemon claims he lost 'liberal friends' after predicting Trump's win in 2016: 'Kicked out of parties'

During “CNN This Morning” on Tuesday, co-anchor Don Lemon said that he “lost a lot of liberal friends” and was kicked out of parties after he “predicted” Donald Trump would win the 2016 presidential election.

While talking with CNN’s Jake Tapper, who told the hosts about his recent interview with comedian Bill Maher, Lemon claimed that he predicted Trump would win the 2016 election over Hillary Clinton. 

“I don’t know if you remember this Jake, I’m sure you do, that I predicted that, I said Donald Trump will probably win the election in 2016. Look, I lost a lot of liberal friends, I actually got kicked out of parties in Brooklyn,” he said. 

Co-host Poppy Harlow replied, “Really?”

NIKKI HALEY RESPONDS TO DON LEMON’S COMMENT THAT SHE’S PAST HER ‘PRIME’: LIBERALS ‘ARE THE MOST SEXIST’

CNN host Don Lemon said Tuesday that he predicted Donald Trump would win in 2016 and said he lost liberal friends over it. 

CNN host Don Lemon said Tuesday that he predicted Donald Trump would win in 2016 and said he lost liberal friends over it.  (Screenshot/CNN/CNNThisMorning)

“I said, have you guys seen the newspaper? The newspapers? He is on every section, he’s on the business section, he’s on the political section, he’s on the real estate section. He is on the front pages. It was just because he knew how to manipulate and use the media and so it’s interesting to, you know, see Bill Maher say, ‘Hey, listen, this guy isn’t going to leave the White House.’ I think the evidence was there but people kind of ignored what’s in front of their faces,” Lemon continued. 

Tapper previously said he asked Maher about what made him repeatedly predict Trump was not going to walk away or gracefully concede after losing an election. 

“He said, have you been watching Donald Trump? Like it was – he is a guy who doesn’t acknowledge ever losing, never concedes defeat, never concedes mistake. It was eminently predictable, he didn’t think it was difficult to see that coming at all,” Tapper said, referring to his interview with Maher. 

DON LEMON TRASHES NEW YORK POST DESPITE HIS OWN NETWORK VALIDATING REPORTING ON HUNTER BIDEN

Former President Donald Trump, with Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, greets supporters while touring Little Beaver Creek and water pumps during a visit to East Palestine, Ohio, following the Feb. 3 Norfolk Southern freight train derailment on Wednesday, Feb. 22, 2023, in East Palestine, Ohio.

Former President Donald Trump, with Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, greets supporters while touring Little Beaver Creek and water pumps during a visit to East Palestine, Ohio, following the Feb. 3 Norfolk Southern freight train derailment on Wednesday, Feb. 22, 2023, in East Palestine, Ohio. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

Lemon made headlines recently after claiming Republican 2024 presidential candidate Nikki Haley was not in her “prime” and saying that a woman is only her prime in her “20s, 30s and maybe 40s.”

Lemon said he regretted the comments hours later after receiving backlash, but did not mention Haley. 

“The reference I made to a woman’s ‘prime’ this morning was inartful and irrelevant, as colleagues and loved ones have pointed out, and I regret it. A woman’s age doesn’t define her either personally or professionally. I have countless women in my life who prove that every day,” he said. 

CNN's Don Lemon speaks at Harvard University Kennedy School of Government Institute of Politics in a program titled "Race, Media and Politics" on February 22, 2019 in Cambridge, Massachusetts. (Photo by Paul Marotta/Getty Images)

CNN’s Don Lemon speaks at Harvard University Kennedy School of Government Institute of Politics in a program titled “Race, Media and Politics” on February 22, 2019 in Cambridge, Massachusetts. (Photo by Paul Marotta/Getty Images) (Paul Marotta/Getty Images)

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After Lemon was absent on “CNN This Morning” for a few days, CNN boss Chris Licht said he would return to the program and undergo “formal training.”

“I sat down with Don and had a frank and meaningful conversation. He has agreed to participate in formal training, as well as continuing to listen and learn. We take this situation very seriously,” Licht told CNN staff in the memo.

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The fastest growing metro in the US is looking to a shrinking reservoir to keep the boom going


Ivins, Utah
CNN
 — 

In a bright-red county in a state allergic to regulations, there is a ban on growing grass outside new businesses. Only 8% of a home’s landscaping can have a grass lawn in this booming corner of Utah, about a hundred miles northeast of Las Vegas.

And if any developers want to add another country club to this golfing mecca, “I don’t know where they would get the water from,” said Zach Renstrom, general manager of the Washington County Water Conservancy District. “And I’m telling you, I know where every drop of water is.”

Like lots of spots in the West, the combination of more people and less water makes for an uncertain future around St. George, Utah. While this winter’s generous snowpack could buy precious time, the entire Colorado River system remains in danger of crashing if water gets too low at Lakes Powell and Mead.

But that reality hasn’t stopped St. George from booming into the fastest growing metro area in the US two years running, according to the US Census Bureau, and Renstrom says that unless Utah builds a long-promised pipeline to pump water 140 miles from Lake Powell, their growth will turn to pain.

In the meantime, Lake Powell – the country’s second-largest reservoir – has struggled to serve even the places it currently provides water to. Last week it sank to the lowest water level since the reservoir was filled in the 1960s, and since 2000 has lost more than 150 feet.

“If we stop construction water, that act alone would lay off about 20% of our county,” Renstrom said. “We’ve made a commitment that we’re going to make sure to be good stewards of every single drop of water that’s already here and make sure we’re utilizing that. But when we look at our long-term growth and you know how much water we need, (the Lake Powell Pipeline) is still in our long-term plan.”

Washington County said it consumed about 50,000 acre feet of water in 2022, all of it supplied by the Virgin River which flows into the Colorado system and out of taps from Vegas to LA. An acre-foot is the amount of water needed to cover one acre to the depth of one foot – roughly 326,000 gallons.

A plan to pump 80,000 acre feet of water a year from Lake Powell to Sand Hollow Reservoir passed the Utah legislature in 2006 and met immediate opposition from environmental groups worried about fragile desert ecosystems. Fourteen dry years later in 2020, the Trump administration tried to fast-track the project’s environmental review but water managers from the other six Colorado River Basin states banded together to block it.

“The system is crashing and to be honest, it’s kind of incomprehensible to think of a diversion of that size that would serve 200,000 people in one county in southern Utah at this moment in time. There’s just not the water,” Matt Rice, Southwest Region Director of the nonprofit American Rivers told CNN. “We’re worried about every molecule of water that that we can deliver to Lake Powell and Lake Mead to protect critical hydroelectric infrastructure.”

While in legal limbo, the controversy brought fresh headlines in January when the mayor of the small Washington County town of Ivins called it “the Lake Powell pipe dream” during a public meeting.

Ivins City Mayor Chris Hart believes that a pipeline from Lake Powell will be necessary for Washington County to continue to develop.

The Lake Powell Pipeline would supply water to Utah's Sand Hollow Reservoir, pictured here.

“Shame on me,” Ivins Mayor Chris Hart laughed about his words as he welcomed CNN to Ivins, proudly pointing out the irrigation-free desert xeriscape around the new city hall.

“The motivation for that comment is that this project has faced a lot of obstacles and continues to with the shortage impacting all of the basin states,” Hart explained. “There are groups who believe that we can that we can work our way out of it through conservation and other ways. The studies show us that eventually the Lake Powell pipeline will be necessary for us to continue to develop in the county. So, I actually used that word tongue-in-cheek, because the serious side of it is that it is an essential part of our plan.”

Hart also said it’s Utah’s turn to grow, after the growth in California, Arizona and Nevada. “They’ve had their enormous growth spurts through the years and the water has been made available for them to do that. And now here we are,” he said. “I think our perspective, from the state of Utah, is we’re entitled to that, to our share, whatever that is,” he said.

Hart and Renstrom are evangelists for water conservation in a county allergic to rules and regulations and where 74% voted for Donald Trump in 2020. “We’re a red state and in Utah, this is a red county. And so we like our independence, we like our freedoms,” Renstrom said. “If I step in and say, ‘I just want more government regulations,’ it’s immediately dead.”

But Renstrom has managed to help pass some of the strictest water laws in the West. “It is causing a lot of friction,” he said, “Because we’re asking people that have had a certain type of lifestyle or a certain way of living and asking them to radically change that, to make sure that we have additional water for our economy. And it’s hard.”

An aerial view of a neighborhood in Ivins, Utah.

Rice at American Rivers says a shift in mindset — especially among Eastern transplants ignorant to living with drought — is vital to future desert survival. Instead of focusing on the pipeline, he hopes desert leaders like Mayor Hart will tap into the unprecedented federal funding for water reclamation projects in both the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and the Inflation Reduction Act.

“There’s about $12 billion that could be deployed in the Colorado River Basin not only for municipal needs but agricultural needs and watershed restoration,” he said.

Hart acknowledged that item is on the wish list.

“One thing that we haven’t done a lot of here that Vegas have become masters at is to recapture the water that flows through our buildings and run it through a treatment plant and then recycle it,” Hart said. “So the few drops of rain that we get, if we can use them four or five times, that’s a whole different thing than the drop of rain comes, you use it and off it goes down the river and it’s gone.”

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Pollinator habitat is good, but not quite the bee’s knees

Introducing pollinator habitat can improve bee abundance and diversity, but the quality of that habitat matters, research finds.

An examination of the program’s effectiveness shows that the quality of the habitat played a key role in positive effects, and that management of the area could affect habitat quality over time.

North Carolina State University researchers studied the effects of a NC Department of Agriculture program that installed pollinator-friendly flowers on 16 agricultural research stations from the mountains to the coast in 2016-18. Mixtures of planted bee-friendly flowers were evaluated for their effectiveness in supporting bee populations—with the goal of increasing the abundance and diversity of bees.

Honey bee specialist David Tarpy, an extension apiculturist at NC State and a coauthor of a paper in Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution on the research, recalls thinking that the program was a unique opportunity to study government-led conservation efforts. “We should get in on the ground floor and measure this and see if it has an effect from day 0, not after the fact,” he recalls.

“We didn’t want to let that ‘natural laboratory’ opportunity pass without actually recording the data,” adds Hannah Levenson, a postdoctoral research scholar and corresponding author of the paper.

Researchers visited all 16 sites four times each year and caught bees in nets and in cups—called bee bowls—that were painted to mimic the UV reflection of flowers. In all, the researchers collected more than 16,000 bees from 128 different bee species.

Results showed bee abundance increased over time, with more bees collected in 2018 than in 2016. Meanwhile, the diversity of species increased in 2017 and then dropped slightly in 2018, although both years showed large improvement over 2016.

“We were really happy to see increases in the abundance and number of bee species found over time,” Levenson says. “It was also exciting to see how many species we documented, especially for studying one kind of habitat. This study was limited to agricultural areas but we still found nearly 130 bee species.”

The study also shows, though, that the quality of flowers was a key driver of bee abundance and diversity, with areas of higher flower quality attracting more bees and more bee species. Poorly maintained areas with degraded flowers, weeds, and grasses lagged behind in bee collection.

“North Carolina has 564 species of bees and they have very different life cycles from each other,” Levenson says. “Some are active in early spring when flowers are just starting to come up. Other species are active in summer. The end of summer is when most bee species are active but have the fewest resources available—it’s called the dearth. So it’s important to develop seed mixes that bloom across the seasons so we can support as many of North Carolina’s bees as possible.”

Levenson says there were a few surprising findings, including a few bee species showing up in unexpected areas.

“We found some specialist bees in places you wouldn’t expect,” Levenson says. “There were no squash plants in our plots, but we found squash bees. It is encouraging that these planted habitats can provide some level of support to specialist species such as this that are economically important pollinators.

“We also found a particular bumble bee—Bombus pensylvanicus—that is under review for potential addition to the endangered species list,” she adds. “We found a high abundance of them, so it’s possible that they’re attracted to agricultural areas more than other areas. We submitted the data to Fish and Wildlife so it can be used to help make the decision on whether it should be listed as endangered or not.”

Levenson says that the program examining the effects of adding pollinator habitat at scale was prescient.

“I want to give credit to the NCDA. To our knowledge it was the first government organization to do test plots like these, and hopefully what we found could encourage more government programs to take actions to protect the environment,” she says. “Even though the habitats weren’t perfect, they still made a difference.”

The researchers hope that further studies like this one can be performed in different types of habitats, like forests or urban areas, to capture a wider sense of bee populations in North Carolina.

“No matter the landscape, we’ve shown that maintenance and monitoring are important to efforts like these,” Tarpy says.

Funding came from the NC Department of Agriculture, the NC Beekeepers Association, and NC State.

Source: NC State

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New College of Florida students to hold rally as conservative leaders move forward with overhaul of school



CNN
 — 

Dozens of parents, students and alumni spoke out against Florida’s conservative takeover of New College during a meeting of the board of trustees on Tuesday.

Several speakers approached the microphone during the public comment session, most expressing outrage at Gov. Ron DeSantis’ decision to move the school in a more conservative direction by handpicking leaders who agree with his vision.

In January, DeSantis replaced six of the 13 members on the college’s board of trustees with conservative allies, including Christopher Rufo, who has fueled the fight against critical race theory. The new board forced out the college’s president and appointed DeSantis ally Richard Corcoran as interim president. Corcoran will earn a base salary of $699,000.

DeSantis’ office insists that the New College of Florida in Sarasota has seen declining enrollment and focuses too heavily on diversity and inclusion, critical race theory and gender ideology.

New College of Florida has offered an environment where members of the LGBTQ community can freely express themselves, students say. Student Sam Sharf said during public comments that the new leadership was launching a “hostile takeover” of the school and has neglected students’ concerns.

“Regardless of your attempts to suppress our educational freedom we will continue to learn the subjects that you want to ban,” Sharf said. “We reject the social inequalities that your ideology defends.”

As public comment closed, the crowd chanted “Shame on you!” toward the board of trustees.

The meeting came after hundreds of people rallied on campus Tuesday, holding signs with phrases such as “protect diversity, equity and inclusion” and “stand up for students.”

The school community has been up in arms for weeks, with many students saying they fear the college will no longer be a safe place for the LGBTQ community or other marginalized groups. Several protests have been held on campus since the leadership changes happened, including a walkout by students last week.

“A lot of us are hurting right now,” said third-year student Chai Leffler, who is studying Chinese and urban studies at the college.

Leffler said New College of Florida has always been a school that has encouraged “free academic thought.” Lawmakers, he said, are trying to strip away that freedom by telling students what they can and can’t study.

“I don’t think politicians should really be the ones making that decision,” Leffler told CNN. “And I really don’t think that’s an unpopular opinion.”

DeSantis said last month that he intends to defund all diversity, equity and inclusion programs at state colleges and universities in Florida. These policies and programs are created to promote representation for people who have historically faced discrimination because of their race, ethnicity, disability, gender, religion or sexual orientation.

ron desantis student protesters SPLIT

Hear Florida student protesters’ message to DeSantis following statewide walkouts

Tuesday’s meeting followed the introduction of a bill in the Florida House that mirrors DeSantis’ ideas for an overhaul of higher education.

The bill, filed by a Republican lawmaker last week, would put board of trustee members in charge of faculty hiring; defund diversity, equity and inclusion programs; eliminate majors or minors related to critical race theory or gender studies; and authorize boards of trustees to review tenure of faculty.

The bill was praised by Rufo, who said on Twitter that it restores the “principle of colorblind equality in higher ed.” Rufo is a senior fellow and director of the initiative on critical race theory at the conservative Manhattan Institute.

“This would be the most ambitious reform to higher education in a half-century,” Rufo tweeted. “Gov. DeSantis is channeling the sentiment of the voters, who have demanded that taxpayer dollars stop subsidizing left-wing racialist ideology and partisan political activism. Democracy returns.”

Some students and advocates say they believe DeSantis has proposed sweeping changes to Florida’s colleges and universities for political gain because he is expected to run for president in 2024.

But they fear the lasting impacts could be Florida colleges struggling to retain students and recruit faculty.

People pursuing graduate degrees might opt for schools in other states that support academic freedom, Irene Mulvey, president of the American Association of University Professors, told CNN earlier this month.

“The consequences for students are enormous,” Mulvey said. “They are denied the opportunity to learn and grow, students are denied the opportunity to hear important perspectives. That’s the real tragedy.”


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