DeSantis defends Florida’s COVID, immigration and law‑and‑order moves

Buckley Institute Remarks · November 15, 2025

Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts

Subscribe
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

In New Haven, Gov. Ron DeSantis defended Florida's COVID policy of keeping schools and businesses open, said his administration removed Soros‑funded prosecutors, and criticized federal border policy while recounting the Martha’s Vineyard migrant relocation incident.

Gov. Ron DeSantis spent portions of his Buckley Institute remarks defending the state’s COVID-era decisions and pressing a law‑and‑order and immigration narrative.

On the pandemic, he said Florida kept schools and businesses open early on despite being unpopular, arguing those choices later proved popular and helped bring voters to his side. "The best decisions I made... had we had the same approach to COVID as California or Illinois or New York," he said, contrasting Florida's choices with other states.

DeSantis also criticized what he described as "Soros-funded prosecutors," saying his state removed such prosecutors from office. He emphasized policies supporting law enforcement, including a $5,000 signing bonus for new recruits who moved into Florida.

On immigration and the border, DeSantis called the Biden administration's border policy a "disaster," described Florida's assistance with removals and the episode in which migrants were taken to Martha's Vineyard as an example of coastal communities not wanting to directly manage arrivals.

These statements were presented as the governor's account of policy actions and outcomes. The speech did not provide supporting documents or outside corroboration for specific prosecutorial removals or operational details beyond the governor's characterization.