Florida Governor Ron DeSantis’s presidential campaign appears to be undergoing another reboot with the hire of former Florida Speaker of the House Jose Oliva as a senior advisor and spokesman. The hire may indicate a significant departure from DeSantis’s strategy to defeat Donald Trump in the Republican presidential primary by running to the former President’s political right.
Oliva, a self-described libertarian, worked closely with former Governor Jeb Bush and the Charles Koch’s pro-corporate lobby group Americans for Prosperity. In 2015, Oliva backed Jeb Bush during the Republican presidential primary and served on the failed campaign’s National Hispanic Leadership Committee. During the 2020-21 Florida budget fight, former Governor Bush praised Oliva’s ‘leadership in the legislature in securing raises for Florida’s public school teachers.
The former Florida lawmaker also has close ties to the Koch-funded Americans for Prosperity, serving on their advisory council. Sharing in billionaire libertarian Charles Koch’s disdain for Donald Trump, Oliva declined to attend the 2016 Republican National Convention, calling it, “…just a formality and I’m not much for ceremony.” Oliva said he’d begrudgingly vote for Trump, but that it was a decision that didn’t please him.
When Governor DeSantis backed the Florida Senate ‘E-Verify’ legislation – granting the governor the power to ensure businesses were not hiring illegal immigrants – Oliva broke with his Republican colleagues calling the legislation un-American:
“Empowering executive agencies to have police powers and do random checks, that is something that is of tremendous concern. We are giving the agency the random ability to show up and do an audit, something about that doesn’t say American to me.”
– DeSantis Spokesman Jose Oliva in 2020
In 2018, when Oliva assumed the speakership in the Florida House of Representatives, he gifted lawmakers each a journal, saying he hoped their written reflections would “…tell of your restraint.” Florida Politics publisher Peter Schorsch has described Oliva as “arguably, the least popular House Speaker since Johnnie Byrd‘s disastrous tenure from more than a decade ago.”
Oliva’s speakership was marred by his alienation of colleagues earning him the nickname “Benedict Oliva.”
Campaign spokesmen are usually expected to be steady communicators who do not give the press or other candidates any ammunition to use against their candidate. Oliva, however, has a history of bizarre public statements – the most glaring of which was referring to pregnant women as “host bodies” in a 2019 interview.