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DeSantis defends Florida's immigration operations and criticizes House leadership at Madison County event

May 15, 2026 | Governor's Cabinet: Rep. DeSantis, Executive , Florida


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DeSantis defends Florida's immigration operations and criticizes House leadership at Madison County event
During the Madison County ceremony, Governor DeSantis used a public question-and-answer period to defend Florida's coordination with federal immigration authorities and to criticize recent action—or inaction—by state House leadership.

Asked why a Republican-controlled legislature collapsed into a special session, a reporter asked whether public clashes with lawmakers, including Speaker Perez, bore responsibility. DeSantis responded that his duty is to "speak the truth" and to hold officials to campaign commitments; he said he would call out leaders who he believes work against the public interest.

On immigration, DeSantis described temporary facilities the state opened at federal request, including nicknamed sites such as "Alligator Alcatraz" and "Deportation Depot," which he said were used to house and repatriate people. "What's happened is you've had 22,000 people go through that facility, and then they get sent, back home right from the runway," he said, describing direct transfers from a nearby airstrip.

DeSantis reiterated that Florida pursued these operations because federal capacity was limited and said the state intended them to be temporary until DHS expanded bed space. He criticized what he called a missed opportunity in the special session to secure measures he supports—making certain COVID-related protections permanent, expanding parents' rights on childhood vaccines, allowing over-the-counter ivermectin and an "AI bill of rights"—and questioned claims that no House members filed bills on these priorities.

He also said the House passed, and he later vetoed, a measure he described as effectively making Florida a "sanctuary state," calling that vote "one of the worst votes" members took in January 2025. DeSantis said the state then pursued veto and alternative measures that preserved the governor's role in immigration enforcement.

He framed these disputes as differences in governing priorities rather than personal animus toward particular leaders, praised the Senate president for productivity and said he has worked historically with House leadership when aligned on policy. The exchange closed with DeSantis reviewing a list of recent state policies he said his administration helped pass and thanking the audience.

No formal motions or votes were taken at the event; the session was ceremonial with a public question period.

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