Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) is continuing his state’s defiant response to the coronavirus pandemic by not only refusing to impose public restrictions, but even seeking to crack down on local governments which attempt to take such basic measures as mask mandates. In doing so, he has an ally in Fox News — the network that frequently undermined public health efforts and even now is trafficking in dangerous anti-vaccine theories — and also in mainstream media outlets, which are making some key mistakes in attempting to cover him.
On Thursday, DeSantis held a “public health roundtable” event featuring hand-picked supporters of his policies including Dr. Scott Atlas, a radiologist and frequent Fox News guest who also advised DeSantis last year. At the event, Atlas reportedly called contact tracing of infected individuals a “completely wrong strategy,” and declared there was “no evidence that a mask mandate has worked.”
Notably, Atlas had previously joined former President Donald Trump’s team of medical advisers — after many appearances on Fox in which he frequently spoke out against most advice from virologists and epidemiologists on how the country should have dealt with the pandemic. The Washington Post had reported that during his time at the White House, Atlas advocated for a dangerous “herd immunity” strategy of simply allowing the virus to spread, and he had also “shot down attempts by Birx and Fauci to expand testing … and advanced fringe theories, such as that social distancing and mask-wearing were meaningless and would not have changed the course of the virus.”
Much like Atlas’ path to the White House, DeSantis also built his career on Fox News. As Politico explained in 2018, “DeSantis’ cultivation of his Fox relationship made all the difference” in his upset victory in the Republican primary for governor that year. He then returned to the network in 2020 to build up a positive image at a time when the pandemic was ravaging his state, after he had reopened far earlier than elsewhere.
Now, he’s relying on Fox and other media outlets to promote his handling of the public health crisis, while downplaying the costs of his decisions.