I'm sympathetic to this view. I probably lean towards it myself. Though, I'm probably less concerned about the actual RCID organization staying intact than some. I've followed the fighting between Disneyland and Anaheim for many years. While the relationship has improved since COVID, for many years the two were engaged in a brutal war of words and political infighting. Despite all of that, Disneyland Resort remained successful and Anaheim continued to rake in cash.
Compared to what Anaheim regularly dished out at Disneyland, any political opposition Walt Disney World faced was laughable. That has shifted 180 degrees. I'm not convinced that the RCID is entirely necessary to the present success of The Walt Disney World Resort. Disney has every incentive to play up the relative importance of the RCID to its operations. Why? Because no firm in its right mind would sacrifice an arrangement like the RCID willingly. The power and financial advantages associated with the district are significant. The ability to fund infrastructural projects using municipal bonds was an excellent benefit.
Is a quasi-corporatist municipality necessary for the continued success of the world's largest theme park resort? I'd lean no.
There is a catch though. Any replacement for the RCID needed to be as competent or more competent than what existed previously. This is not an impossible bar to reach. But this grandstanding about corruption and the general disorganization exhibited by the board indicates that the RCID was better run than the new organization. And that is where I become concerned. No citizen or property owner in Florida should suddenly find their government more poorly managed than it was before. Especially if that is in retaliation for political positions.
I have probably managed to make every person on this board angry with this post...