Local Florida broadcast news bungled their coverage of recently-passed immigration measures championed by Gov. Ron DeSantis, which some have characterized as the harshest anti-immigration crackdown in America.
On February 23, DeSantis revealed a policy plan targeting the estimated 775,000 undocumented immigrants in the state of Florida. The House passed the Senate version of this proposal, SB1718, on May 2. On May 10, Desantis signed SB1718 into law despite widespread pushback from faith leaders, business groups, and Florida’s farmworkers association. These groups have said the legislation would “criminalize the church’s work” and harm Florida’s economy, which relies on undocumented workers. Florida House members tabled SB1718’s near-identical companion bill, HB1617, after legislators approved the Senate version.
Local news outlets aired 369 segments about the proposal from February 23 up until May 1, a day before the legislature passed SB1718. Coverage largely did not inform viewers about the severity of the bills, frequently failing to explain key aspects or to interview immigrants directly affected by the legislation.
Though the iteration of SB1718 signed into law stopped short of criminalizing the transport of undocumented immigrants within Florida, it still has the potential to make a felon out of any American who helps migrants into the state. The SPLC Action Fund warns SB1718 could impose far-reaching consequences on mixed-status families across the U.S. The state Senate also kept alarming provisions that invalidate identification cards issued to undocumented people by other states, including driver's licenses, and repealed a rule that created a path for undocumented immigrants to be admitted to the Florida Bar.
The original version of SB1718 would have taken away in-state tuition vouchers for undocumented immigrants, including DACA recipients and people brought to the United States as children. (This provision was dropped from the final bill, but it was in the version that existed during our study.) Legislators are still requiring businesses with over 25 employees to use the federal E-Verify system to check the immigration status of employees, mandating that hospitals that accept Medicaid ask patients about their immigration status, and giving DeSantis $12 million for the controversial migrant relocation initiative.