Ron DeSantis during his victory speech at the Tampa Convention Center on Nov. 8, 2022. Credit: Photo by Dave Decker
Gov. Ron DeSantis has appointed conservative activist Christopher Rufo and five others to the New College of Florida Board of Trustees in his continuing move to eliminate โ€œpolitical ideologyโ€ from public higher education.

With the six new members of the schoolโ€™s Board of Trustees, the DeSantis admin plans to weed out concepts like diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) and critical race theory (CRT). The move comes amid low student enrollment at the New College of Florida and as DeSantis ramps up his second term.

In a statement Friday, DeSantis Communications Director Taryn Fenske said New College has been โ€œcompletely captured by a political ideology that puts trendy, truth-relative concepts above learning.โ€

โ€œStarting today, the ship is turning around,โ€ DeSantis Press Secretary Bryan Griffin continued. โ€œNew College of Florida, under the Governorโ€™s new appointees, will be refocused on its founding mission of providing a world-class quality education with an exceptional focus on the classics.โ€

Rufo, along with several of his fellow appointees, has been a driving force in the movement against CRT.

โ€œIโ€™m proud to announce that Gov. Ron DeSantis has appointed me to the Board of Trustees of the New College of Florida,โ€ Rufo tweeted. โ€œMy ambition is to help the new board majority transform New College into a classical liberal arts institution. We are recapturing higher education.โ€

Others appointed Friday are Emory University professor Mark Bauerlein, Claremont-McKenna College professor Charles Kesler, attorney Debra Jenks and Inspiration Academy Co-Founder Jason โ€œEddieโ€ Speir.

Rounding out the list is Matthew Spalding, dean of Hillsdale College D.C. campusโ€™ Graduate School of Government. Hillsdale College is a private conservative liberal arts college that the DeSantis administration is referencing as its model for transforming New College.

โ€œIt is our hope that New College of Florida will become Floridaโ€™s classical college, more along the lines of a Hillsdale of the South,โ€ DeSantis Chief of Staff James Uthmeier said in a statement.

New College, located in Sarasota, has been a topic of legislative debate in recent years as the school enrollment has fallen into the hundreds and the cost of tuition is higher than Floridaโ€™s public higher education institutions. However, the school has said it is on pace to meet its enrollment targets.

Legislation proposed in 2020 would have reclassified the college as a satellite campus of Florida State University.

New College lists its mission statement and values on its website, including a section on its โ€œjust, diverse, equitable and inclusive community.โ€

โ€œWe seek a balance between recognizing and celebrating difference, respectfully supporting each otherโ€™s growth, and ensuring that historically marginalized and oppressed groups are not experiencing trauma and harm,โ€ reads the section. โ€œNew College values equity and is actively working toward eliminating outcome disparities for underrepresented and underserved groups.โ€

Republican Party of Florida Vice Chair Christian Ziegler, a former Sarasota County Commissioner, commended DeSantis for taking action against the โ€œliberalโ€ school.

โ€œImpossible to state just how bold and historical this action is,โ€ he said in a statement. โ€œIt sets the tone that higher education can and will be reformed if conservative leaders are willing to step up, lead and act.โ€

DeSantis has emerged as a leader in the Republican Party, in part for his actions and rhetoric against fields of study like DEI or CRT and policies like environmental, social and governance investing criteria โ€” more commonly called ESG. The Governor has criticized controversial topics as โ€œwoke ideology,โ€ and did so again Tuesday during his second inaugural address.

โ€œWe must ensure that our institutions of higher learning are focused on academic excellence and the pursuit of truth, not the imposition of trendy ideology,โ€ DeSantis said.

The appointments also come two days after the DeSantis administration confirmed the Florida Department of Education had asked state colleges and universities to compile lists of programs and campus activities relating to DEI and CRT ahead of the 2023 Legislative Session.

Sarasota Rep. Fiona McFarland is among the Republican officials who have come out praising the move, noting New Collegeโ€™s cost of enrollment. Another Representative, Orlando Democrat Anna V. Eskamani, called Rufo a โ€œpolitical propagandistโ€ in a tweet.

โ€œDeSantis is destroying higher education in Florida for his own political gain. Itโ€™s disgusting, bad for our workforce development (and) everyone โ€” faculty, admin, alumni, students โ€” need(s) to fight back,โ€ Eskamani tweeted.

Meanwhile, New College President Patricia Okker welcomed the new appointees, who fill vacancies for terms that ended Friday.

โ€œMy thanks to the Governor for todayโ€™s announcement and for the slate of new board members,โ€ said in a statement. โ€œI look forward to getting to know them and working with them to ensure New College continues to serve our students, community, and state in the years to come.โ€
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Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics contributed to this report.

This post first appeared in Florida Politics.