Nominee for South Carolina's top doctor toppled by lingering COVID anger
[April 04, 2025]
By JEFFREY COLLINS
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — A South Carolina Senate committee rejected the
Republican governor's nominee to be the state's top doctor after hours
of hearings dominated by the state's response to the COVID pandemic.
Just one of 13 Republicans on the Senate Medical Affairs Committee voted
for Dr. Edward Simmer 's nomination to lead the new Department of Public
Health — in contrast to the Republican-dominated Senate's overwhelming
endorsement of Simmer in 2021 as head of the state’s old public health
and environmental agency.
Thursday's vote reflected lingering anger over his handling of South
Carolina's response to the pandemic. Simmer recommended people get the
COVID vaccine, and he often wore masks well after the worst of the
pandemic had passed, saying he wanted to protect his wife, who has a
compromised immune system.
Defending his record
Simmer defended his record, pointing out that in two years under his
leadership of the old agency, South Carolina improved from 45th to 37th
among U.S. states in overall public health measures and that COVID now
takes up only a tiny percentage of his time.
“Sometimes a small amount of people can make a lot of noise. I think
that's what we’re seeing here," Simmer said. “But I also hope you can
look at my overall record, where we are going as a state."
The Department of Public Health was created last year, and Gov. Henry
McMaster nominated Simmer, a retired U.S. Navy psychiatrist, to run it.
But the governor's support came with a backhanded knock on the federal
government’s COVID response
“He’s not a Dr. Fauci,” McMaster said, referring to Dr. Anthony Fauci,
the infectious disease expert who advised Presidents Donald Trump and
Joe Biden on the pandemic.

Angry questions
Several Republicans aggressively questioned Simmer, reading aloud
excerpts from his email in which he strongly encouraged people in 2021
to get the COVID vaccine and wear masks. Simmer said he was only
following the best science at the time and said he never thought anyone
should be required to be vaccinated. He walked senators through the
importance of following peer-reviewed studies.
There was a simple solution to all the angst over COVID, Republican Sen.
Tom Fernandez said.
“We didn’t have all the information. This is what we did have. We had
the United States Constitution. We had personal liberty. We had personal
freedom. That's the best information at any time of any emergency,"
Fernandez said.

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Dr. Edward Simmer listens as the South Carolina Medical Affairs
Committee gave his nomination to be the first director of the South
Carolina Department of Public Health an unfavorable vote on
Thursday, April 3, 2025, in Columbia, S.C. (AP Photo/Jeffrey
Collins)
 Sen. Matt Leber asked why Simmer
didn't push back on schools buying Plexiglas barriers or grocery
stores putting arrows on floors to encourage one-way traffic up
aisles. “Sometimes where there is chaos there is a vacuum of
leadership,” Leber said.
Simmer’s critics both at the Statehouse and on social media have
derisively called him a “double masker” for wearing two face masks
even after he explained that his wife has underlying medical
conditions that make COVID especially dangerous for her.
He was maskless for hearings both last month and on Thursday but
said he “will wear a mask again without hesitation if that is what
it takes to protect the woman I love.”
COVID hindsight
The lone Republican to vote for Simmer asked his colleagues to go
back to 2020 and 2021 when many of them also organized COVID testing
and made sure their constituents could find places with COVID
vaccines.
Sen. Tom Davis said punishing Simmer for what could only be known at
the time was a terrible precedent. “If he’s guilty of some
dereliction of duty in that regard, then I am derelict as well,”
Davis said.
The Senate’s longest serving member, Republican Harvey Peeler, asked
if Simmer would be willing to run the state Department of Mental
Health if his nomination failed.
“Fauci blew up. You got hit by the shrapnel,” said Peeler, a senator
since 1981. “You talk to my constituents. They see you, they think
Dr. Fauci.”
What's next
The vote doesn’t kill Simmer’s nomination. But the full Senate,
dominated by Republicans, would have to vote to pull it out of
committee and send it to the floor.
The only real mention of anything other than COVID during the
hearing came from Democrats.
One questioned him about how South Carolina was monitoring measles
outbreaks in other states.
A second asked about a mobile maternity care center set to hit the
road in 2026. South Carolina is near the bottom in the nation in
infant and maternity deaths and has a number of poorer counties
where getting to the nearest obstetrician can involve at least a
50-mile (80-kilometer) drive.
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