Credit: Photo via New College/Facebook
After Gov. Ron DeSantis this month sparked controversy with appointments of six trustees at New College of Florida, the state universityโ€™s Board of Governors on Wednesday chose an author and president of the Washington, D.C.-based Ethics & Public Policy Center to serve as a New College trustee.

The Board of Governors appointed Ryan Anderson, whose books have included, โ€œTearing Us Apart: How Abortion Harms Everything and Solves Nothingโ€ and โ€œWhen Harry Became Sally: Responding to the Transgender Moment,โ€ according to information posted on the Ethics & Public Policy Center website.

Andersonโ€™s appointment came after an uproar about DeSantisโ€™ appointments of conservatives to the board of the small liberal-arts school in Sarasota.

DeSantis has targeted โ€œtrendy ideologyโ€ in higher education, and the appointments have been widely viewed as an attempt to remake the leadership and direction of New College.

Board of Governors member Alan Levine praised Anderson during a committee meeting Wednesday before the appointment to the New College board was finalized.

He said Anderson, who has a doctorate from Notre Dame, has appeared widely on news networks and in major newspapers.

โ€œIโ€™ve had an opportunity to speak with Dr. Anderson,โ€ Levine said. โ€œI find him to be a compelling figure, somebody who is measured and very respectful of our governance process and very eager to serve.โ€

Anderson is a former senior research fellow at The Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank, and was the founding editor of the online journal Public Discourse, according to information on the Ethics & Public Policy Center website.

The center lists priorities on the website, including โ€œPushing back against the extreme progressive agenda while building a 2024 consensus for conservatives.โ€

State university boards of trustees are made up of 13 members, with the Board of Governors appointing five members.

Andersonโ€™s appointment is subject to confirmation by the Florida Senate.