logo
Gov. McMaster set a good example for all public officials: Call out lies, demand due process

Gov. McMaster set a good example for all public officials: Call out lies, demand due process

Yahoo30-03-2025

I saw something in the paper the other day that almost took my breath away.
A lie was called a lie.
To his credit, Gov. Henry McMaster has done that publicly and repeatedly as he has addressed criticism against his choice to head the new South Carolina Department of Public Health, Dr. Edward Simmer.
Critics are calling the 30-year Navy doctor our version of Dr. Anthony Fauci, who as head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases was America's leading voice for public health during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Simmer is being branded as an enemy of 'medical freedom' and a mask and vaccine totalitarian.
McMaster said that's not true.
It was in my colleague Matthew T. Hall's column on the Simmer situation that I read these stunning words from McMaster: 'I have not found a word of truth about the allegations they're making against that man. He wasn't even here when all those mandates were going on. He wasn't even here.'
The pandemic, and the state's and nation's public response to it, were well under way when Simmer was hired in February 2021 as director of the state's Department of Health and Environmental Control. He was subsequently named interim director of the Department of Public Health when DHEC was split into two agencies.
McMaster defends Simmer as an eminently qualified stalwart who was at his side almost daily as South Carolina made its way through the pandemic better than most states did.
But that's not the important point.
The important thing is that a state leader — a conservative Republican and devotee of President Donald Trump – recognized lies and had the courage to call them that in the public square.
We need more of that because lies are flying like rounds from machine guns all day every day.
McMaster pointed out one of the dangers when false accusations go unchallenged.
'This is the very reason that people do not want to get into public office because they are erroneously attacked for ulterior motives,' he said. 'It is dangerous. It is dangerous to our state. This man is eminently qualified.'
It is pitifully dangerous when an entire nation is led to believe that it is inferior and that no one can trust elections, judges, law enforcement officials, longtime international allies, journalists, bureaucrats, doctors, librarians, immigrants — or each other.
Much of that distrust is fueled by lies.
More leaders need to relocate their spines and say, 'No. That's not true. I will not accept that.'
The first thing out of our mouths when reading anything online — and especially from those interviewing government officials – should be, 'What is your source?'
Or as reputable journalists do, confirm information with at least two sources.
The second important thing McMaster did was call for due process.
He acknowledges that some people will not like his choice to enhance public health in one of America's most unhealthy states.
But he reminded us about one of America's greatest assets, one taken from the pages of the Torah and the Magna Carta before forming the backbone of our Constitution: Due process.
'They ought to let the man have his hearing, ask him the questions and give him a fair hearing,' McMaster said.
He added: 'I do not know if we could find anyone as good as, much less better than, Dr. Simmer, so I think those that are criticizing him ought to take a good look at the facts and then decide what they want to say.'
Nominated by McMaster in November, Simmer received his first a confirmation hearing on March 20 before the state Senate Medical Affairs Committee. He was not bashful to say what is at stake.
'These falsehoods and lies not only impact me,' he said. 'They are dangerous. They erode the public's trust in our front-line health care workers and put the people who believe the lies and falsehoods at risk.'
Little did I know what a prophetess my high school chemistry teacher, Mrs. Saunders, would become in my old age.
The only thing I remember from that old scientist's class was her often repeated admonition: 'Don't believe anything you hear, or half of what you see.'
David Lauderdale may be reached at lauderdalecolumn@gmail.com .

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Defying Morrisey executive order, WV board of ed directs schools to follow existing vaccines law
Defying Morrisey executive order, WV board of ed directs schools to follow existing vaccines law

Yahoo

time19 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Defying Morrisey executive order, WV board of ed directs schools to follow existing vaccines law

A child under 12 years old receives a dose of Pfizer vaccine as part of the COVID-19 immunization campaign on Jan. 18, 2022 in Belo Horizonte, Brazil. (Pedro Vilela | Getty Images) West Virginia school officials will instruct public schools to follow the state's existing vaccine laws, going against an existing executive order from Gov. Patrick Morrisey that students be exempted from the requirements based on their religious beliefs about the shots. At its regular meeting Wednesday, the state Board of Education signed off on directing Superintendent Michele Blatt to issue the vaccine mandate guidance to county school boards. West Virginia state law allows only medical exemptions to school-required vaccines, making the policy one of the strongest in the country. Morrisey issued an executive order earlier this year requiring the state to allow religious exemptions. Speaking at the school board meeting, Sean Whelan, Morrisey's general counsel, told the school board there's been a misunderstanding about the basis of Morrisey's executive order. The governor isn't second guessing science or defying a law passed by the Legislature, he said. 'Instead, he is reading that vaccine law together with another law, the Equal Protection for Religion Act of 2023, which prohibits government action that substantially burdens a person's exercise of religion unless it serves a compelling government interest and is the least restrictive means of achieving that interest,' he said. 'That language mirrors the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act, which federal courts across the country have described as a super statute, displacing the normal operation of otherwise applicable federal laws.' The executive order applies only to the state health officials under Morrisey's purview, and the governor is not ordering the Board of Education or county school boards to do anything, Whelan said. 'But he is asking for your partnership and support in applying the Equal Protection for Religion. Act that has been on the books since 2023 and until he came into office, wasn't applied,' Whelan said. 'That law should be applied as written, and when it is, it requires the religious exemptions to compulsory vaccination that the health department provides.' State lawmakers this year did not pass Senate Bill 460, which would have made the religious exemptions part of state law. Despite the bill not passing, Morrisey's executive order stands. The state Department of Health had approved approximately 300 religious exemptions as of late last month. The difference between the governor's order and state law has led to a fractured response from schools. Blatt issued a memo May 2 to county superintendents recommending that students not be allowed to attend schools next year without the required vaccinations but rescinded the guidance before the end of the day at the governor's request. Some private and religious schools opted not to follow the governor's order. Last month the American Civil Liberties Union of West Virginia and legal advocacy organization Mountain State Justice filed a lawsuit asking the Kanawha County Circuit to compel the state's Department of Health and Bureau for Public Health to stop complying with the executive order. In a statement Wednesday, Morrisey spokesman Alex Lanfranconi said the school board is 'trampling on the religious liberties of children, ignoring the state's religious freedom law, and trying to make the state an extreme outlier on vaccine policy when there isn't a valid public policy reason to do so. This decision isn't about public health — it's about making West Virginia more like liberal states such as California and New York,' he said. The Department of Health will continue to grant religious exemptions, he said. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

Ohio Democrats select former state rep Kathleen Clyde as new state party chair
Ohio Democrats select former state rep Kathleen Clyde as new state party chair

Yahoo

time19 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Ohio Democrats select former state rep Kathleen Clyde as new state party chair

Ohio Democratic Party Chair Kathleen Clyde. (Photo provided.) Former state Rep. Kathleen Clyde has been elected as the next Ohio Democratic Party chair. Clyde was elected Tuesday night by members of the party's State Executive Committee. 'I'm grateful to Ohio Democrats for putting their trust in me during this critical election cycle, and I'm looking forward to getting to work,' Clyde said in a statement. 'With every statewide office and a U.S. Senate race on the ballot, Ohio has key opportunities to elect Democrats who actually work for Ohioans and get our state back on the right track.' SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX Current chair Liz Walters announced last month she will step down from the role no later than June 30. Walters, who was appointed chair in 2021, will be the new CEO of TargetSmart, a Washington, D.C.-based Democratic political data analysis firm. She was the first woman to be Ohio Democratic Party chair. Former U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown endorsed Clyde for party chair. Brown lost to Republican Bernie Moreno in the 2024 election. Brown has yet to announce if he is running for office in 2026. Clyde served in the Ohio House of Representatives from 2011 to 2018. She ran for Ohio Secretary of State in 2018, but lost to Republican Frank LaRose. In December 2018, she was appointed to the Portage County Commission. She ran for a full term as commissioner in 2020 but was defeated by Republican Tony Badalamenti. Ohio state Sen. Bill DeMora, D-Columbus, and Greene County Democratic Party Chair Kim McCarthy both dropped out of the race to be state party chair last week. Ohio Supreme Court Justice Jennifer Brunner is the only Democrat currently holding any statewide office in Ohio. Republican incumbent Ohio Supreme Court Justice Patrick Fischler is challenging Brunner for her seat in 2026, unable to pursue another term in his own seat due to age restrictions. Republicans currently control the state high court 6-1. All four statewide executive offices of governor, attorney general, auditor, and secretary of state are up for open election in 2026, with all of the current Republican incumbents term-limited out of running for the same positions again. Former Ohio Health Department Director Dr. Amy Acton is currently the only Democratic candidate running for Ohio governor. Republican candidates include businessman Vivek Ramaswamy and former Morgan County school board president Heather Hill. Current Republican Ohio Auditor Keith Faber is running for attorney general in 2026; current Republican Ohio Treasurer Robert Sprague is running for secretary of state in 2026; and current Republican Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose is running for auditor in 2026. Current Republican Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost had been running for governor, but recently dropped out of the race after the Ohio Republican Party endorsed Ramaswamy. Bryan Hambley, a cancer doctor with University of Cincinnati Health, is the only announced Democratic candidate for Ohio Secretary of State. No other Democrats have yet announced their candidacy in 2026 for Ohio auditor, treasurer, or attorney general. Ohio House Minority Leader Allison Russo, D-Upper Arlington, announced last week she is stepping down from her leadership role at the end of the month, but she has not said whether she will seek a statewide office. The last time any Democratic candidates won any of Ohio's statewide executive offices was in 2006, when Ted Strickland was elected governor, Marc Dann was elected attorney general, Rich Cordray was elected treasurer, and Jennifer Brunner was elected secretary of state. They were all swept out of office in the 2010 cycle. Also in 2006, Democrat Sherrod Brown was elected to his first of three terms in the U.S. Senate, defeating then-incumbent U.S. Senator and now-incumbent Republican Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, before being defeated himself in 2024. Follow Capital Journal Reporter Megan Henry on Bluesky. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

RFK Jr. names 8 new members of vax advisory panel
RFK Jr. names 8 new members of vax advisory panel

Axios

time24 minutes ago

  • Axios

RFK Jr. names 8 new members of vax advisory panel

HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy on Tuesday named eight new members to serve on an influential federal vaccine advisory panel after firing all 17 of the committee's members. Why it matters: While Kennedy posted on X that the new appointees are committed to evidence-based medicine, several have a history of expressing anti-vaccine sentiment or voicing concerns about COVID-19 or mRNA vaccines. Some were also signers of the Great Barrington Declaration, a petition authored by a group of scientists including current NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya that advocated for allowing COVID to spread among young, healthy people to reach herd immunity faster. The approach drew fierce criticism from many experts. The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices serves as an outside expert source to make recommendations to the Centers for Disease Control. Its recommendations can influence whether insurers cover vaccines. The new members are: Martin Kulldorf, a biostatistician who previously served on the Vaccine Safety Subgroup of ACIP and who was a co-author of the Great Barrington Declaration. He was fired from Harvard University for refusing COVID vaccination. He later claimed it was because he was " too pro-vaccine." Robert Malone, a physician-scientist and biochemist who made early contributions to mRNA vaccine technology. He was dubbed a "misinformation star" by the New York Times for spreading false information about COVID and mRNA shots, including claiming he was an inventor of the technology.. Cody Meissner, a professor of pediatrics at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, who has previously held advisory roles for both CDC and FDA. He is also a signer of the Great Barrington Declaration and co-wrote an editorial with FDA Commissioner Marty Makary during the COVID pandemic arguing against masking for children. Retsef Levi, a professor of operations research at MIT. Levi has been a critic of mRNA vaccines, posting on social media in 2023 that "we have to stop giving them immediately." Vicky Pebsworth, a long-time nurse with a Ph.D. in public health. She previously served on the FDA's Vaccine and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee and on the National Vaccine Advisory Committee's vaccine safety working group for the H1N1 vaccine. As of 2022, Pebsworth served on the board of the National Vaccine Information Center, an anti-vaccine group. She's spoken publicly about her son experiencing long-term health issues following vaccines at 15 months old. Joseph Hibbeln, a psychiatrist and neuroscientist who previously worked at the NIH for many years. He primarily studies nutrition and brain health. Michael Ross, a clinical professor of obstetrics and gynecology at George Washington University and Virginia Commonwealth University. James Pagano, an emergency medicine physician licensed in Florida and California. The other side: The announcement immediately stoked fears from some public health experts that the committee selections are overly skeptical of vaccines. "It's entirely possible that some of these people may be completely non-problematic," Angela Rasmussen, a virologist at the Vaccine and Infectious Disease Organization at the University of Saskatchewan. However, others are "unbelievably anti-vax people. They are 100% not going to approach this in good faith."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store