'60 Minutes' attempts to defend its hit job on Gov. Ron DeSantis, Florida vaccine program
News magazine makes absurd accusations of Publix grocery stores being used as vaccine sites because the company contributed to DeSantis campaign
There is no more accurate way of describing Sunday night’s 60 Minutes segment on Governor Ron DeSantis of Florida than as a political hit job. It was an aspersion, a slander, a smear — a calculated and premeditated defamation contrived for one purpose and one purpose alone: To hint darkly at scandal where none exists, and, thereby, to damage DeSantis in 2022 and beyond.
Americans who tuned in to 60 Minutes Sunday are now less informed than they were before it aired. The supposed “problem” that 60 Minutes highlighted was that Florida’s government has used the popular grocery chain Publix to help it distribute CCP virus vaccines, that Publix gave $100,000 to Governor DeSantis’ re-election efforts last year, and that the combination of the two represents a quid pro quo.
This claim is absurd on its face. Not only is Publix the largest and most widely trusted grocery-store chain in the state of Florida, but the majority of its 831 stores in the state have well-equipped pharmacies at which Floridians are accustomed to getting flu shots. Irrespective of any other logistical considerations, it would have been surprising if Publix had not been one of the major players in the state’s effort.
It is true that Publix has recently given $100,000 to Ron DeSantis’ gubernatorial reelection bid. It is also true that it gave a million dollars to the progressive Urban League last year, and that, back in 2018, it gave $100,000 to Democratic campaigns in the state. To believe that there is a connection between this routine behavior and decisions that were made during an unforeseen once-in-a-century pandemic is to stretch oneself to the breaking point.
The producers of 60 Minutes know this, which is why they edited out the portion of Governor DeSantis’ answer that explains beyond question why Publix was chosen for its role. In the offending segment, CBS’s Sharyn Alfonsi is seen asking DeSantis, “Publix, as you know, donated $100,000 to your campaign, and then you rewarded them with the exclusive rights to distribute the vaccination in Palm Beach. How is that not pay for play?”
CBS correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi ambushed Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) for a Sunday 60 Minutes segment attempting to smear him with a false allegation of ‘pay-for-play’ involving Publix Groceries becoming a CCP virus vaccine distributor. (Photo Montage: CBS 60 Minutes screenshots)
Deceptively, CBS used only a carefully edited initial response from DeSantis in full. Deliberately missing from the governor’s comments was his detailed answer laying out how the distribution system has worked in Florida in general, and how Publix has slotted into it in particular. In the unaired portion, DeSantis says:
First of all, the first pharmacies that had [the vaccine] were CVS and Walgreens and they had a long-term care mission, so they were going to the long-term care facilities. They got the vaccine in the middle of December, they started going to the long-term care facilities the third week in December to do LTCs. So that was their mission, that was very important and we trusted them to do that. As we got into January, we wanted to expand the distribution points.
So yes, you had the counties, you had some drive-thru sites, you had hospitals that were doing a lot, but we wanted to get it into communities more. So we reached out to other retail pharmacies: Publix, Walmart, obviously CVS and Walgreens had to finish that mission and we said we’re going to use you as soon as you’re done with that.
None of this was apparent to viewers of 60 Minutes. The show did not report that CVS and Walgreens got the vaccine first. It did not explain the difference between the strategy for long-term-care facilities and the strategy for the broader population. It did not mention that Walmart was also used in the delivery of vaccines to the general public.
CBS is standing by the segment. Regarding Alfonsi’s question and the carefully edited DeSantis response to her ridiculous “pay-for-play” scheme allegations regarding Publix CBS flailed desperately Tuesday trying to justify the edit.
“As we always do for clarity, 60 Minutes used the portion of the Governor’s over 2-minute response that directly addressed the question from the correspondent,” a CBS spokesperson told Dateline on Tuesday.
That is an outright lie. The edited response left a great deal of facts on the cutting room floor and, as already pointed out, utterly failed to accurately portray DeSantis’ and the state’s reasoning in asking not just Publix, but Walmart and other large chains to join in the vaccination effort.
Nor did the segment reference the work DeSantis has done extending the state’s effort to minority communities; and, crucially, it did not make clear that the reason Publix was so prominent in the second phase of vaccinations was that it was the first grocery chain to be ready. Instead, the show took two facts that in no way intersect and pretended that they had a causal relationship. There is a word for that sort of conduct, but it’s not “journalism.”
Director of State Emergency Management Services Jared Moskowitz, no political ally of Gov. DeSantis, nonetheless leaped to the governor’s and the state’s defense in regard to selecfting Publix as a vaccine distributor. (Photo: News Service of Florida)
So egregiously dishonest was 60 Minutes’ attempt that, shortly after it aired, the Director of the Florida Division of Emergency Management took to Twitter to condemn it. “I said this before and I’ll say it again,” Jared Moskowitz wrote. “Publix was recommended by FLSERT [State Emergency Response Team] and HealthyFla [Florida Department of Health] as the other pharmacies were not ready to start. Period! Full Stop! No one from the Governor’s office suggested Publix. It’s just absolute malarkey.”
Moskowitz, we should note, is no ideological ally of Governor DeSantis. On the contrary: He describes himself as a “progressive,” served as a Democrat in the Florida legislature until 2019, and has worked in various capacities for Al Gore, Joe Lieberman, and Barack Obama. His father, Michael, is one of the top Democratic fundraisers in the state.
Unlike the producers of 60 Minutes, however, Jared Moskowitz is not a liar.
Unfortunately, he, DeSantis and the whole state of Florida are fighting against the tide. 60 Minutes’ lies will now be laundered and repeated until, in millions of minds around the country, they are habitually referenced as “facts.” In that status they will be joined by the oft-repeated lie that Florida has been “cooking its books,” which it has not.
From the moment the pandemic began, the mainstream press has proven itself incapable of writing about Florida as anything less than a mysterious, godforsaken backwater that, somehow, has managed to stumble through this crisis despite itself. That Florida ranks in the middle of the pack for deaths, despite having the fourth-oldest population in the country and being the destination of choice for young people, seems not to matter.
Many commentators seem not to care that Florida has done this while managing to stay largely open. Meanwhile, there have been real, verifiable, and under-covered scandals elsewhere. More over, the most populous state in the union is holding a recall election for its governor over his CCP virus response, and at the moment the 60 Minutes segment ran, it was not Florida that was in crisis, but Michigan, operating under the dictatorship of its power-mad governor, Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat..
In part, this monomaniacal failure of imagination has been the product of the false reputation that Florida enjoys among a certain sort of sneering self-insulated, isolated Northeastern Power Corridor journalist. Bubbling below the surface of all of last year’s coverage has been an unlovely implication: “That guy, in that state? Something tricky must be going on.” Sunday, 60 Minutes made that explicit.
As it turned out, though, it wasn’t DeSantis who was playing games with the truth. It was CBS.