The moves came after Gov. Ron DeSantis this month appointed six conservative board members, leading to heavy speculation that the governor was angling to remake the leadership and direction of the school.
Corcoran, a former Republican House speaker, led high-profile initiatives for DeSantis while serving as education commissioner, such as trying to weed out critical race theory โ which is based on the premise that racism is embedded in American society โ from Florida classrooms.
Since leaving the commissionerโs post last year, Corcoran has worked at the consulting firm Continental Strategy. He is expected to become New Collegeโs interim president in March. Bradley Thiessen, chief of staff in the schoolโs Office of the President, was selected by the trustees to lead the school until Corcoran can step in.
Okker was approved as New College president by the state university systemโs Board of Governors in 2021 and formerly was dean of University of Missouri’s College of Arts and Sciences.
DeSantis, who has targeted โtrendy ideologyโ in higher education, suggested Tuesday before the Board of Trustees meeting that changes were needed at the Sarasota school.
DeSantisโ comments came as he rolled out a legislative proposal that included asking lawmakers to earmark $15 million in next yearโs budget for recruiting and retaining new faculty at New College, with $10 million recurring each year.
โHereโs the thing, it (New College) is by statute supposed to be the premier honors college in Florida. Thatโs the mission. It clearly has not met that mission, because our premier students are going to UF (the University of Florida) or some of our other schools. So, I think this is going to really reorient it in a very positive way,โ DeSantis said.
But in some of her final remarks before trustees voted for her removal, Okker pushed back against what DeSantis frequently characterizes as โindoctrinationโ on higher-education campuses.
โIโm going to say publicly โ I do not believe that students are being indoctrinated at New College. I believe a president needs to stand behind her words when she asks donors to contribute. It is the only way that I can be effective. You cannot ask me to go forward and argue that we are indoctrinating students here,โ Okker said.
Corcoran was floated as Okkerโs interim replacement by trustee Matthew Spalding, a DeSantis appointee and professor at Hillsdale College, a liberal-arts school in Michigan that is prominent among conservatives.
โThis college is languishing. It needs to be revived. Itโs got a great potential future. It can be much larger, much more influential, much more flourishing in the Florida system,โ Spalding said, adding that he aimed to โhave leadership that is fully committed to that direction.โ
Spalding told trustees that he and Corcoran are โold friendsโ and that Corcoran, who was not present at Tuesdayโs meeting, would agree to take the interim position.
Corcoran drew headlines after a speaking engagement at Hillsdale College in 2021, in which he touted a proposal to place strict guidelines on the way U.S. history is taught in Florida classrooms. The state Board of Education ultimately approved the proposal later that year.
Before the vote on Okkerโs removal, trustee Grace Keenan, who is New Collegeโs student-body president, was among the trustees who argued that Okker should be able to keep her job.
โI think youโve done an amazing job,โ Keenan told Okker. โI think you are an incredible person to lead us through these changes, and I hope you stay.โ
This article appears in Jan 26 – Feb 1, 2023.

