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Sabatini to CNN: “we’ve never had government tell you what to do with your own face”

Appearing in a nationally televised interview Wednesday, Republican State Representative Anthony Sabatini defended lawsuits he’s filed against local governments that are requiring their residents to wear masks inside places of business.

Fielding loaded questions from CNN’s Brianna Keilar, Sabatini lambasted the face-covering order being adopted by several counties across Florida, calling such orders broad and in violation of the state’s equal protection clause.

“We do believe it is unconstitutional,” Sabatini told Keilar. “We have a very robust privacy clause here in the state of Florida, in our state constitution, and it’s supposed to protect all sorts of private information and liberty when it comes to a person.”

“This is something government’s never done before. We’ve never had government tell you what to do with your own face,” he continued.

Sabatini, however, didn’t take the bait, refuting much of Keilar’s talking points while calling out the media’s myopic focus on one singular stat: confirmed cases.

“Brianna, I think what you’re doing is what a lot of folks in the media have done which is harped exclusively on one metric, namely cases,” Sabatini pushed back. “The media has almost exclusively focused on this one number versus the two most important numbers — obviously, hospitalizations and fatalities.”

“If we focus on the two most relevant metrics, Florida is doing fine,” he continued.

Besides cutting the Republican lawmaker off and interrupting his rebuttal numerous times, Keilar also tried to compare wearing a mask in public to wearing a seatbelt. When asked if seatbelts were unconstitutional, Sabatini hit Keilar with a haymaker.

“Seatbelts, of course, are something that are assigned for people to wear in very highly regulated areas of public domain, namely highways,” Sabatini said. “When you go to a highway, you’re driving very fast, you’re operating a piece of technology and so the state has an interest in governing what happens in those very specific arenas.

With Keilar conducting one of the most unprofessional interviews in recent memory, very little was accomplished in the area of political discourse.

Keilar’s emotional response to the mask mandate didn’t stop there, however, with the CNN correspondent frantically trying to score points on Sabatini in a Twitter thread.

As it stands, several counties across the state have issued orders that make wearing a mask mandatory inside establishments like restaurants, grocery stores, buses, churches, and nonprofits. Many of these mandates carry penalties if violated, including fines and potential jail time.

Sabatini maintains that such orders are unconstitutional. He hopes that pushback will lead to counties altering the language — much like what was done in Seminole County.