Disney and Ron DeSantis cronies settle their Florida lawsuit


Two months after shutting down his ill-begotten presidential campaign that cost his state’s taxpayers millions of dollars, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has now come to the end of another campaign: his war with Disney. Early last year DeSantis sought to punish Disney for opposing his “Don’t Say Gay” bill by undoing Disney’s little fiefdom in Central Florida. I can’t fully explain the setup, but Disney’s special arrangement had been a legal, nearly self-governing kingdom of its own for 50 years already, in a coexistence I liken to The Vatican in Italy. So when DeSantis got his feelings hurt by The Mouse, he said he was ending the district’s special privileges. Disney fought back by filing a First Amendment lawsuit and abandoning a $1.3 billion building project, and somehow King Charles III was used as a legal argument. Which brings us up to speed with this week’s development that Disney and DeSantis have reached a settlement:

Disney agreed Wednesday to end litigation in state court involving a Florida special tourism district that the entertainment giant effectively controlled for more than five decades until last year after Gov. Ron DeSantis moved to revoke that status.

The settlement lifts a significant barrier to the continued development of Walt Disney World in the Orlando area and provides for the potential resolution of a related federal case.

The state lawsuit was originally filed in Orange County by the Central Florida Tourism Oversight District to void agreements the old district board had signed with Disney right before it was dissolved at DeSantis’ behest after Disney opposed Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” bill backed by the governor.

Disney in turn had asked the court to rule that the agreements, which benefited the company, were valid.

As part of the settlement of that case Wednesday, Disney agreed not to challenge the CFTOD’s determination that the prior agreements with the old Reedy Creek Improvement District were null and void.

The settlement also includes Disney’s agreement to seek permission from a federal appeals court to pause its effort to revive a dismissed retaliation lawsuit against DeSantis in Florida federal court in light of expected negotiations of “among other matters a development agreement” between the company and the district.

That clause suggests that if Disney is satisfied with the outcome of the negotiations, it might drop the federal civil complaint against the Republican governor.

The CFTOD board was scheduled to meet in executive session Wednesday morning to discuss the settlement.

Walt Disney World President Jeff Vahle, in a statement, said, “We are pleased to put an end to all litigation pending in state court in Florida between Disney and the Central Florida Tourism Oversight District.

“This agreement opens a new chapter of constructive engagement with the new leadership of the district and serves the interests of all parties by enabling significant continued investment and the creation of thousands of direct and indirect jobs and economic opportunity in the State,” Vahle said.

In January, a federal judge dismissed Disney’s lawsuit against the governor, which had claimed he and others retaliated against the company for criticizing a controversial parental rights education law. That law, dubbed “Don’t Say Gay,” limits school classroom discussion of sexual orientation and gender identity.

The judge ruled that Disney lacked legal standing to sue DeSantis on its claim he violated the company’s First Amendment rights by pushing to change the Reedy Creek Improvement District due to Disney’s opposition to the law.

Disney had appealed the dismissal of that suit.

But in its agreement Wednesday with the CFTOD, Disney agreed “to seek, and the District will not oppose, permission from the court to defer briefing in Disney’s pending federal appeal … pending negotiations among other matters of a new development agreement between Disney and the District.”

[From CNBC]

So it sounds like Disney has agreed to accept that their previous agreements with the Reedy Creek Improvement District are over. One victory for DeSantis. It seems Disney has also agreed not to move forward with the appeal on their First Amendment lawsuit, pending satisfactory negotiation with the new district body. Another victory for DeSantis? It cannot be that Cruella DeSantis has prevailed over Disney! No no no. I’m thinking that DeSantis has taken enough hits lately that behind the scenes, he’s assured Disney that the new district body will work out an arrangement very much to Disney’s liking. Disney is so powerful and sounded so bullish in their statement, I just can’t imagine them settling for anything less than exactly what they want. So I’m sticking with the theory that The Mouse has triumphed over The Little Governor That Couldn’t&tm; in exchange for extending a little public face-saving. (And if you’re asking whether I mean “little” regarding spirit or stature, the answer is yes.)

Images credit: Cover Images and via Instagram

You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.

13 Responses to “Disney and Ron DeSantis cronies settle their Florida lawsuit”

Comments are Closed

We close comments on older posts to fight comment spam.

  1. FancyPants says:

    Well boo, I was hoping Disney would rub his smug face in it a little harder than that.

  2. Tuesday says:

    Something isn’t being said because there is no fucking way Disney would let that peon roll over them.

    • michel says:

      exactly

    • Concern Fae says:

      I’m guessing Disney has some sort of new agreement that has quietly been approved.

    • ML says:

      Disney is acting as though they didn’t cave, but the reporting doesn’t seem to back that up. It’s giving me a bad feeling, and I hope the quiet part gets said out loud ASAP.

      • Lightpurple says:

        The quiet part is the House of Mouse Legal has once again got exactly what it wants but is allowing its prey to save face.

        Mess with House of Mouse Legal at your own peril.

        And now, back to crushing Gina Carano.

      • Nicole says:

        Unfortunately Disney has lost on all counts. Seems official now.

  3. Eurydice says:

    I don’t think this is an issue that sprang up suddenly with DeSantis. The selling point for the legislation 50 years ago was that Disney would build EPCOT as a working futuristic city, but Disney later decided it didn’t want to do it. So, it seems there have been issues since day one.

  4. Becks1 says:

    I’m sure Disney got what it wanted in one form or another so they’re okay with the federal suit going away and the state suit being settled. Disney isn’t backing down for funsies.

    • Digital Unicorn says:

      Yeah no way will the House of Mouse walk away without getting something it wanted – they had a very strong case again him and his cronies. Am sure it will out soon enough – am thinking they got a new deal for the area that is very beneficial for them.

  5. Saucy&Sassy says:

    I have no doubt that the new agreement with that District will be pretty much exactly what it was before DeSatan decided to mess with it. Disney is, IMO, just getting back to where they were. It’s public District, so anyone should be able to get a copy of the new agreement. DeSatan is probably hoping he gets to keep being Governor over this, because if no one look deeper is APPEARS on the surface that DeSantan won. Disney is NOT dismissing their case, they are just pausing it until a new agreement is worked out.

    There is another piece to this. If government can interfere with a private corporation (even if they’re on the stock market), what does that say to other corporations in the US? The Republicans needed this case to go away.

    • BeanieBean says:

      That’s how I read it. There’s no actual finality to anything yet, Disney is pausing its federal lawsuit while they & Florida negotiate some sort of deal that no doubt approximates what it had before but will likely be even better than what it had before. I’m with Lightpurple, ‘mess with House of Mouse Legal at your own peril’.

  6. goofpuff says:

    The pause in the case is a threat that if the board doesn’t give Disney everything it wants, it will unpause and take them all down. Its a strategic move because in the end, what Disney wants is all the power and if the board is willing to give it to Disney until the end of time to make the lawsuit go away and “look” like they won, Disney will take it any way it can get it. In the end, the House of Mouse will always win.