Unhappy perhaps , but there would be no Orlando and it’s growth without the Mouse.
If we're talking about the past, absolutely. Disney certainly played an essential part in making the area what it is today but that also includes a huge glut of relatively undesirable low-wage employment both from them and from other tourist businesses, especially as more and more non-tourist related businesses have begun to move operations into the area which, combined with vacation home buying, has made it very difficult for a large percentage of local low-wage working residents to live with any sense of stability or security.
The problem as it affects everyone is that Disney and the surrounding area, very much need/want this low-wage labor but don't want to properly provide for it.
As far as Disney's feelings, you need only look to Anehiem to understand how much they value their cast's well being.
If you're talking about the past and how that somehow deserves "loyalty" today, who exactly is still around working for the current corporate behemoth that people, businesses, and the government should be thankful to for what the Disney of yesteryear did for them?
I've said before that I remember when many of us were fearful of the Comcast attempt at taking over Disney many years ago and what that would do to the company but Disney themselves grew into something much worse than the now-owners of Universal ever were.
It's also worth pointing out that a lot of what fans from outside the area imagine today's Disney brings to the table are things that many locals see as holding the economy back.
All that money you spend at Disney? It helps increase the need for
low-wage labor and the bulk of the profit made gets divvied up outside of the state with a relatively small percentage being reinvested, locally.
Disney may be an unfairly popular target right now but the irrational discontent with them in Florida is not
entirely unfounded.
Disney still matters a lot here but not as much as it used to and as they continue to matter less and less, their outsized influence will continue to wane both at the state and local level.
To deny that means to argue with your eyes closed because I'm not talking about some theoretical possible future - it's happening right now in front of us.
Some of what's happened in the last couple years would have been unthinkable a decade or more ago. A Florida governor, eager to publicly battle them, regardless of his political aspirations, is just
one of those things.