ProPublica reporter Alec MacGillis was mocked on Twitter for suggesting that a piece of decades-old gossip about Gov. Ron DeSantis, R-Fla., was concerning.
On Saturday, MacGillis shared a lengthy Financial Times report by Joshua Chaffin that described the Florida governor as “Donald Trump with brains and without the drama.” Within the massive analysis on DeSantis, MacGillis highlighted a second-hand account of the governor as an undergraduate at Yale University and how he would allegedly leave dates over their reaction to his pronunciation of the phrase “Thai food.”
“Yikes: ‘According to a friend, DeSantis would tell dates he liked Thai food, but pronounced it ‘thigh.’ If they corrected him, Finch wrote, he would find an excuse to leave. ‘He didn’t want a girlfriend who corrected him’,” MacGillis tweeted.
The story came from author Charles Finch’s pandemic memoir “What Just Happened: Notes on a Long Year” where Finch recalled what he knew about DeSantis during their university days.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis listens to a question during a press conference Sept. 7, 2022, in Miami.
(AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)
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The remark, along with the accusation, was mocked on social media as a poor example of journalistic curiosity and an attack on DeSantis.
“I mean. Biden hung out with segregationists and Harris kept innocent men in prison to advance her career, but this is bad too. I guess,” conservative commentator Chad Felix Greene tweeted.
Red State Managing Editor Jennifer Van Laar wrote, “*This* is what they are slinging at DeSantis? Pathetic. Also, no one wants a boyfriend or girlfriend who corrects them, and if they do it on the first date it’s a really bad sign.”
“You’re supposed to save this stuff for a couple of years guys. Pace yourselves,” The Spectator contributing editor Stephen Miller joked.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks at Miami’s Freedom Tower, on Monday, May 9, 2022.
(AP Photo/Marta Lavandier, File)
Journalist Mark Hyman mocked, “Where do they find such amazing journalists who perform these deep-dive investigations on critical issues? @propublica must be so proud. Next up: what flavor ice cream the president ate.”
“Guys. I think the walls are closing in on DeSantis. They’ve finally got him cornered. I don’t believe he’ll survive the scandal of a British newspaper’s investigation revealing that, 25 years ago, when he was a student, he once pronounced Thai as thigh. It’s over,” Rebel News journalist Ezra Levant wrote.
“THIS IS WHY PULITZERS,” Mediaiate editor Caleb Howe tweeted.
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Despite several tweets criticizing him, MacGillis stood by the tweet and his opinion that this claim about DeSantis was “striking.”
He responded to one critic who wrote, “Damn Alec. You’re one of the few true objective journalists left and you pull and highlight [hearsay] quote from 20 years ago from a ‘friend’. Disappointing.”
“Point taken. But I trust both the quoted author and the FT reporter enough to cite it. It’s a small but striking detail,” MacGillis replied.
Various mainstream media outlets have attacked Gov. Ron DeSantis, R-Fla., following his rise in prominence among Republicans.
(Carl Juste/Miami Herald/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)
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The accusation resembled a 2021 Politico report on DeSantis that appeared to attack him over “scarred” ex-staffers. Social media users similarly called out that story as a “hit piece” based on weak accusations and second-hand accounts.