Disney’s Wild Ride: DeSantis-Appointed Board Set to Declare Disney’s Unchecked Authority Null and Void

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by Jonathan Turley

This weekend, I contributed to an article for the New York Post with an exclusive on a move by the new board governing Disney properties to declare the recent transfers of power to the company to be null and void. Below is my column on the legal implications of that move and how Disney may be set for a truly wild ride in the weeks ahead.

Here is the column:

Walt Disney used to say, “The way to get started is to quit talking and begin doing.”

Gov. Ron DeSantis is about to put Disney’s own motto to the test — against Disney.

According to a high-ranking Florida official, the newly created Central Florida Tourism Oversight District is set early this week to call Disney on one of the worst bluffs of all time.

The result could prove the House of Mouse made a costly miscalculation.

For decades, Disney had reason to be the “happiest place on Earth.” Florida supported the company by giving it a unique status in controlling its own governance.

The Reedy Creek Improvement District controlled the Disney property, and Disney effectively controlled its board.

Technically, the board was elected by those living on the Disney property, which amounts to a small number of people living among the “cast members.”

It was a breathtaking deal for the company, which set its own building standards, granted its own construction permits and determined the scope of services, building codes, waste collection and other infrastructure matters.

Outside of the Vatican, such self-governance is little more than a fantasy for companies and organizations.

That favored status came to a crashing halt when Disney went public with a pledge to oppose Florida’s Parental Rights in Education Act.

The legislation prohibited classroom instruction on sexual orientation and gender identity from kindergarten to third grade. It also required “age appropriate” material in other grades.

Then-Disney CEO Bob Chapek originally told workers the company would not take a public position on the legislation to stay out of politics.

Disney employees protested, and Chapek quickly caved, declaring the company would fight to have the law rescinded.

The company has long been “woke” in its policies. But this was a crossing of the Rubicon in plunging into politics.

Disney became the symbol of increasing corporate activism.

While going woke will not necessarily force Disney to go broke, it is facing unprecedented boycotts of its parks and movies, including controversial children’s films with same-sex characters and relationships. On two of those movies, Disney lost more than a quarter of a billion dollars.

Picking fights with people with general tax authority is rarely a winning strategy for a company.

The state responded by removing Disney’s favored status, gutting the Reedy Creek Improvement District and creating the new board with governing authority over Disney properties.

Disney could still have tried to find a compromise. Instead, it did something even more reckless.

In the final days of the Disney-dominated board, the members voted to transfer powers to the company.

Disney is used to being its own self-governing boss.

That history may have warped its judgment in attempting this power grab. It is a move that would make the pirates of the Caribbean blush.

The “declaration of restrictive covenants” gives Disney total control over development and even bans the new board from using Disney’s name or the names of any of its “fanciful characters.”

It added what is called a royal clause, used in England since 1692.

It specified this “Declaration shall continue in effect until 21 years after the death of the last survivor of the descendants of King Charles III, King of England, living as of the date of this declaration.”

Disney may have been too clever by half. The “Hail Mickey” play appears fundamentally flawed.

I have been told the new board intends to treat the declaration as null and void. It appears to have strong grounds to do so.

Indeed, Disney’s legal case seemed no better planned than its political campaign.

First and foremost, under Florida Section 163.3225, a board cannot order such changes without giving a seven-day public notice and other conditions.

You are not allowed a jump scare like Space Mountain — you must give notice on your intended measures.

There is no indication the board did so.

That alone could nullify the declaration. Ordinarily, a board would simply reschedule the vote with proper notice, but the old board is gone.

There are also serious problems with a board using a declaration to nullify a state law and pass a development plan with no actual plan for development.

It is a curious legal claim that this now-defunct board could negate not just current state law but law for the next 30 years.

Instead, the new board will “quit talking and begin doing.” It will proceed with a vengeance.

Since the old board is no more, Disney will have to sue to try to enjoin the new board. For new CEO Bob Iger, this could make Mr. Toad’s Wild Ride look like a walk in the park.

Disney has no good options.

Even if it could sustain this dubious declaration, the state has myriad ways to impose added costs on the corporation.

When you are sitting on billions in a fixed, unmovable 27,000 acres (42 square miles) of real estate assets, declaring war on your host state is remarkably stupid.

Worse yet, this declaration does appear invalid, and I am told the new board is ready to give Disney a rude awakening this week.

Pro-Disney staff will be canned and public hearings planned on the range of new regulations for the Magic Kingdom.

There are a host of areas that will be subjected to inspections, from the elevators to the famed monorail.

There are also salaries for first responders and others, who may have been underpaid by the Mouse.

Likewise, decades of controlling its own environmental compliance will come to an end with the potential for considerable costs and changes.

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DeSantis threatens retaliation over Disney’s attempt to thwart state takeover
It wasn’t an attempt, Ronnie. They thwarted you. Which is why you’re now throwing a Donnie-like tantrum.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on Monday threatened to build a prison or a competing theme park near the Magic Kingdom or raise taxes on Walt Disney World to retaliate against the company for resisting a state takeover of its special taxing district.

Laying out his plan to exact retribution against the House of Mouse, the Florida Republican said the GOP-controlled state legislature will take steps to “formally nullify” Disney’s attempts to maintain control of the district through last-minute maneuvering.

DeSantis said lawmakers will advance a bill that will “make sure that people understand that you don’t get to put your own company over the will of the people of Florida.”

”The will of the people of Florida” doesn’t have a damn thing to do with it. It’s all about political posturing so DeSantis can make a play for the presidency. Remove tourism dollars, and Florida will be nothing but a crime-ridden nursing home state slowly succumbing to worsening hurricanes, depleted ground water, falling revenue, and rising sea levels.

Last edited 2 years ago by Greg

Here Is What They Won’t Tell Children About Trans Surgery: No Ejaculations, No Typical Climax, Excretions from Skene’s Glands, Bizarre-Looking Penis, Very Atypical Orgasms

You mean to tell me that butchering surgeries and a cascade of drugs doesn’t make a real woman or man? What the hell?

Maybe this is the kind of information that should be made available to the children being groomed instead of just what those who hope to abuse them sexually want them to know.

Matt Gaetz: Soaring Crime Rates Are ‘What You Get With the “Soros-ization” of the US Justice System’ [VIDEO]

That’s not a bug, it’s a feature. Republicans prosecute crime, Democrats USE crime.

While California only has 11 total desalination plants Florida has 38 in south Florida alone. With the assistance of the South Florida Water Management District’s Alternative Water Supply program, the number of desalination plants in South Florida has grown 82 percent since 2005 while the capacity of those plants water produced by these plants has increased 144 percent during the same period. Unlike Californication, Florida planned for population CA made no such plans, all ths excess runoff from record snow is flowing into the sea, some long dry lakes have reappeared
Proof the sea is rising ask all the green weenie private plane crowd with sea side homes.
Lets talk about geo engineering and Hurricanes that gain strength as they hit landfall. Whats normal When hurricanes make landfall, they begin to decrease in strength because they no longer have the ocean water from which to gain energy. 
But climate has always been changing New research suggests that a desert region in the western U.S. – including Nevada, Utah, Oregon, and parts of California — was a rather damp setting until approximately 8,200 years ago. Must have been Mastodon farts.
If you would only educate yourself the sea has been risen and fallen many times with the coming and going of Ice ages.
Ya those nursing homes filled with looters and gang members. Feb 28, 2023 TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Crime is down in Florida for a 50-year low, according to the 2021 Annual Uniform Crime Report released today. The report covers the calendar year of 2021 and shows Florida’s total crime volume dropped 8.3 percent, or 38,524 fewer reported index crimes, compared to 2020. Both violent and property crimes decreased in 2021. Now lets do California, NY or any other democrat run state like Illinois.
why would Floridas revenues fall? People are moving there unlike in Those democrat shitholes.

And that drop in crime is not due to simply no longer calling the crimes crime and refusing to prosecute crimes anymore, like California and New York, or anywhere controlled by Democrats.

I don’t know if you know what geography is (kind of like you don’t know what biology is), but Disneyworld is in Florida and they are subject, whether they approve or not, to Florida legislation and laws. Disney shouldn’t have put its sexualization of children over their own business interests.

I hope the left is paying attention. Disney sodomized its golden goose to death because they objected to parents having more rights with their children than groomers in the schools. That’s it; that’s the hill they chose to die on. I’m glad DeSantis hasn’t let up; this message needs to be driven home brutally. It’s time for those leeching off of governments learn that benefit comes with certain responsibilities and one of those is respecting the laws of the state and nation.

While ultra left states are legalizing medical kidnapping and pedophilia Florida is passing laws to snuff the kiddie rapists. Seems the prisoners that normally carry this out are not efficient enough.

Last edited 2 years ago by kitt