SEN RICK SCOTT: The lesson of Artemis? Purge woke politics and let NASA do its job
April 9, 2026
Fox News
Sen. Rick Scott
April 9, 2026
This week, Americans and people around the world have been awed and inspired by an incredible journey that began in my home state of Florida. After a successful launch at Cape Canaveral, NASA has sent human beings around the moon for the first time in 54 years. Artemis II has now completed its lunar flyby, traveling more than 250,000 miles from Earth and venturing farther into space than any crewed mission in modern history.
As exciting as this mission is, it’s only the beginning of America’s new future on the final frontier. And none of it would be possible without sound leadership.
Under the leadership of President Trump and NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman, Artemis III is expected to launch next year, entering low Earth orbit to rendezvous with one or both commercial lunar landers before landing Americans on the moon in 2028.
While this achievement belongs first and foremost to our heroic astronauts, NASA’s brilliant workforce and everyone who has worked so hard on Florida’s Space Coast, it is also the result of a long-needed shift in leadership priorities.
For decades, NASA struggled with inconsistent direction. After Barack Obama canceled the Constellation program, the agency drifted, and Florida’s Space Coast began to fall by the wayside.
Back then, NASA funding reached an all-time low as a percentage of the federal budget. Jobs started to disappear in Florida. That’s why, during my eight years as governor, we worked to invest more than $230 million in spaceport projects to help the Space Coast and create thousands of high-paying aerospace jobs. This included working with the private sector, helping set the stage for Florida as the site of the Blue Origin launch site and the transfer of the Shuttle Landing Facility from NASA to Space Florida.