FDA's top drug regulator resigns after federal officials probe 'serious
concerns'
[November 03, 2025]
By MATTHEW PERRONE
WASHINGTON (AP) — The head of the Food and Drug Administration’s drug
center abruptly resigned Sunday after federal officials began reviewing
“serious concerns about his personal conduct,” according to a government
spokesperson.
Dr. George Tidmarsh, who was named to the FDA post in July, was placed
on leave Friday after officials in the Department of Health and Human
Services’ Office of General Counsel were notified of the issues, HHS
press secretary Emily Hilliard said in an email. Tidmarsh then resigned
Sunday morning.
“Secretary Kennedy expects the highest ethical standards from all
individuals serving under his leadership and remains committed to full
transparency,” Hilliard said.
The departure came the same day that a drugmaker connected to one of
Tidmarsh’s former business associates filed a lawsuit alleging that he
made “false and defamatory statements,” during his time at the FDA.
The lawsuit, brought by Aurinia Pharmaceuticals, alleges that Tidmarsh
used his FDA position to pursue a “longstanding personal vendetta”
against the chair of the company’s board of directors, Kevin Tang.
Tang previously served as a board member of several drugmakers where
Tidmarsh was an executive, including La Jolla Pharmaceutical, and was
involved in his ouster from those leadership positions, according to the
lawsuit.
Messages placed to Tidmarsh and his lawyer were not immediately returned
late Sunday.

Tidmarsh founded and led a series of pharmaceutical companies over
several decades working in California's pharmaceutical and biotech
industries. Before joining the FDA, he also served as an adjunct
professor at Stanford University. He was recruited to join the agency
over the summer after meeting with FDA Commissioner Marty Makary.
Tidmarsh’s ouster is the latest in a string of haphazard leadership
changes at the agency, which has been rocked for months by firings,
departures and controversial decisions on vaccines, fluoride and other
products.
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The Food and Drug Administration seal is seen at the Hubert Humphrey
Building Auditorium in Washington, April 22, 2025. (AP Photo/Jose
Luis Magana, File)
 Dr. Vinay Prasad, who oversees FDA’s
vaccine and biologics center, resigned in July after coming under
fire from conservative activists close to President Donald Trump,
only to rejoin the agency two weeks later at the behest of Health
Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
The FDA’s drug center, which Tidmarsh oversaw, has lost more than
1,000 staffers over the past year to layoffs or resignations,
according to agency figures. The center is the largest division of
the FDA and is responsible for the review, safety and quality
control of prescription and over-the-counter medicines.
In September, Tidmarsh drew public attention for a highly unusual
post on LinkedIn stating that one of Aurinia Pharmaceutical's
products, a kidney drug, had “not been shown to provide a direct
clinical benefit for patients.” It's very unusual for an FDA
regulator to single out individual companies and products in public
comments online.
According to the company's lawsuit, Aurinia’s stock dropped 20%
shortly after the post, wiping out more than $350 million in
shareholder value.
Tidmarsh later deleted the LinkedIn post and said he had posted it
in his personal capacity, not as an FDA official.
Aurinia’s lawsuit also alleges, among other things, that Tidmarsh
used his post at FDA to target a type of thyroid drug made by
another company, American Laboratories, where Tang also serves as
board chair.
The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court of Maryland, seeks
compensatory and punitive damages and “to set the record straight,”
according to the company.
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