Florida Governor Ron DeSantis publicly criticized Florida House Speaker Daniel Perez for refusing to take up legislation on several key issues, including medical freedom and an AI Bill of Rights.

DeSantis stated that Perez has done the “opposite” of what voters expected public servants in the Sunshine State to do. “The reason they didn’t do it is because he is not governing in the best interest of the people of the state of Florida. He has a personal agenda,” DeSantis said.

The governor added, “He has other things that he’s concerned about.”

DeSantis also remarked, “You do have people who campaign one way and then they get up to Tallahassee and they don’t think you’re going to follow what they’re doing and they think they can do whatever the h they wanna do.”

The governor took issue with Perez refusing to hear medical freedom legislation as well as the so-called AI Bill of Rights during last month’s congressional reapportionment Special Session.

Regarding the bills not being introduced in the House, DeSantis suggested that members were told “don’t file on this,” giving Perez a pretext not to hear the measures passed by the Senate in the Regular Session.

DeSantis believes voters will ask legislators why the House didn’t take action. “I think the constituents are going to go to these House members. They are going to say: ‘You got a Special Session. You had a chance to lead. Florida’s always led on this stuff. Why would we be backtracking on medical freedom given all the fights we won during COVID? Why would we not want to lead on protecting people in this age, you know, where so many people are trying to accelerate AI?’ To me, these were just no-brainers.”

DeSantis noted that he worked well with Senate President Ben Albritton, whom he lauded as a “friend” and a “good guy,” and urged listeners to consider his “track record” with the Speakers who preceded Perez.

“Look at the six years leading up to this. We were more productive than any time in the history of the state of Florida legislatively. And yeah, part of it was me setting the agenda, but part of it was you had other people leading that chamber who wanted to put big points on the board and took pride in that we were leading on all these different issues for Floridians. That has just changed over the last year-plus,” DeSantis said.

“I would not say that there’s a similarity between our interactions with the Senate leadership and the House leadership. I think it’s totally different. And I think we’ve worked very well with the Senate leadership.”

“Yet, when given the chance to deliver for their constituents, not a single Republican House member could even be bothered to file a bill. Typical political shenanigans,” DeSantis said last month.

The governor highlighted that Florida’s House leadership blocked a sweeping medical freedom bill. This bill would have allowed parents to refuse childhood vaccines, required healthcare providers to inform parents of vaccine risks, made ivermectin available over the counter, banned businesses and government entities from discriminating based on mRNA vaccination status, prohibited vaccine manufacturers from offering or paying healthcare practitioners financial incentives for giving vaccines, and restricted state health officials from mandating vaccines in an emergency. The bill had the full support of Governor Ron DeSantis and Surgeon General Dr. Joseph Ladapo.

“In this job, I’ve come to realize that power is most honorable when used for the benefit of others,” Ladapo stated. “The governor’s agenda to defend freedom, whether from medical tyranny or tech oligarchs, is something Floridians and Americans everywhere want and value. Members of the Florida House should be leading that effort, not standing in the way.”

DeSantis noted that the bill passed the Senate during the regular legislative session on a 37-1 vote. He also referenced polling data from the University of North Florida Public Opinion Research Lab in early March, which found that 86% of respondents supported specific AI regulations, such as requiring chatbots to identify themselves as being AI and prohibiting creation of sexually explicit altered images.

“Obviously, it was something that I supported,” DeSantis said. “And look — not that I go by polls — but I guarantee you, if you tell people, ‘Do you think that there needs to be a framework for artificial intelligence to be able to protect individual freedom and the well-being of children, or do you think the 10 wealthiest companies in human history should just be able to do whatever they want?’ I think it’s about 90% are in favor of having a framework.”

DeSantis added that the AI Bill of Rights would have banned companion chatbots — AI systems that mimic emotional connection — from speaking to minors without parental consent and required bots to remind users they are not human.

“So, that got to the House. And again, he said, nobody filed a bill. Well, people had wanted to do this in the House. I know. I’ve talked to the House members to do it. So, is it true that nobody filed a bill? And if that is true, then I think that the constituents are going to go to these House members and they’re going to say, ‘You had a special session. You had a chance to lead Florida.’”