Canceled Candidate Vows to Stop Leftist Mob From Icing Out Conservatives - đ The Liberty Daily
(The Daily Caller)âRepublican South Carolina Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette and her legislative allies are on a quest to ensure colleges in the state never again retaliate against a scheduled speaker due to their political views.
The lieutenant governor made headlines when South Carolina State University (SCSU) canceled her scheduled May 8 commencement address citing safety concerns following left-wing student protests citing her stance against diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI), among other issues. The schoolâs decision to disinvite the Republican prompted a group of conservative South Carolina lawmakers to call to strip a $5 million taxpayer-funded grant for SCSUâs convocation center.
ADVERTISEMENTEvette is a leading GOP candidate in South Carolinaâs open gubernatorial race and is endorsed by both President Donald Trump and term-limited Republican South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster. She told the Daily Caller News Foundation in an interview that she supports the lawmakersâ effort.
âAny institution that gets and receives state taxpayer dollars that tries to stop conservative speech, we must take their money away, their state money,â the lieutenant governor said. âThatâs all we control. We must take their state money away. Full stop.â
The student protesters cited the Republican gubernatorial candidateâs opposition to DEI, her pro-life stance on abortion, her support for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and alliance with Trump. Evette has continually referred to these students as a âwoke mob.â SCSU is South Carolinaâs only public historically black four-year university.
Republican South Carolina State Rep. Melissa Lackey Oremus, one of the lawmakers spearheading the effort to pull the convocation funding, told the DCNF in an interview that âwhile we canât run the school and the state at the same time, we can be vocal about what they can and canât do with state funds.â
Oremus led a June 1 letter to budget conference committee members calling for the removal of the $5 million earmark toward the convocation center.
â[W]e are asking that this item not be included in the conference report to send a strong signal that free speech at state funded institutions of higher education will not be prevented,â Oremus and her fellow Republicans wrote.
âIt is a horrible example and precedent when a publicly funded university caves in to the wishes of a few students to cancel a speaker and limits the right of an entire student body to hear the words of someone just because they donât like the politics of that person,â the letter added. âThis cannot be tolerated.â
South Carolinaâs lawmakers are in the process of finalizing the state budget which is set to go into effect July 1, WLTX reported.
Oremus has endorsed Evetteâs bid for governor in the GOP primary. She told the DCNF that her legislative effort is not a way to âhurtâ or âpunishâ SCSU âin a way that they canât come back from financially,â but instead to send a warning about silencing conservatives.Evette told the DCNF that a representative from SCSU called her office in December 2025 and asked if she would be the universityâs commencement speaker the following May, leading her to accept.
âNot a whole lot of anything really happened from December until all of this broke loose just about a month ago,â she added.
The man who led the charge to ask Evette to speak at the universityâs commencement was Douglas Gantt, chairman of the SCSU Board of Trustees, according to Oremus. The lawmaker said that Gantt, who is black, is a Republican.
Evette said the student protest âstarted as kind of a sit-inâ but escalated to âa lot of angry protesters saying a lot of things.â She noted that she was getting âa lot of really disturbing messagesâ via social media and email.
SCSU then called Evetteâs âattorneys in the governorâs office and basically said they were going to have to rescind the invitation, citing safety concerns,â the lieutenant governor told the DCNF. âI was just flabbergasted, because every convention speech I give talks about this amazing country we live in.â
The schoolâs National Alumni Association President Yolanda Williams and Student Government Association President Zaria Tucker ended up giving the May 8 keynote commencement address in the Republicanâs place.
She noted that the speech she was planning to give did not mention DEI, ICE, Trump, or any of the other issues the student protesters cited in voicing their opposition to her. Instead, Evette said she was going to speak âabout the fact that my grandparents were immigrants, and my dad was a tool and die maker and ⌠if you work hard and you follow your dreams, you can be whatever you want to be.â
âIt is not like it was ever going to be a political talk,â Oremus said. âShe wasnât going to be like, âOh, Iâm MAGAâ or this, or anything like that. Itâs basically inspirational to inspire them to the next level. Do your best, be the best you can be.â
âI think my story is a great story to tell,â Evette told the DCNF. âI didnât inherit anything. I worked really hard. I grew a very successful national company in the private sector and now serve as lieutenant governor. And I was just shocked that that wasnât a message they felt was worth hearing, because what they did say was that I was pro-life and I was pro-Trump and I was anti-DEI, I was pro law enforcement and pro-ICE, and thatâs why they didnât want me there.â
âWe all want to see them thrive and educate our children the best. But if youâre going to educate our children and indoctrinate our children, we donât send our kids to college to be indoctrinated. We encourage them to be free thinkers and be exposed to a lot of different things,â she said. âAnd this is the kind of thing that weâre stopping right now.â
Evette has also been a vocal proponent of ending tenure for university professors for the past several months. In her April 29 statement immediately following SCSUâs decision to disinvite her, she said the âroot problem is professors who gin up feigned outrage to the detriment of their students, whom they should be teaching to think critically. End tenure now!â
She similarly advocated for ending tenure in a September 2025 op-ed for The Post and Courier written shortly after the assassination of Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk on a college campus. Multiple professors and teachers had celebrated or spoke favorably about the conservative activistâs violent murder.
âAfter the political assassination of Charlie Kirk, I was very direct to the media when I said we should stop tenure on college campuses, because there were so many professors saying so many disgusting things after a human being had just been murdered,â Evette told the DCNF. âSo many were saying, âWell, these professors have tenure, our hands are tied, or our options are limited.â Itâs like, well, then we should ⌠just do away with that.â
âConservative speech has got to be protected everywhere, and I feel like you know what I hear from students, and what I hear from parents, and what Iâve heard from my own children is that if you are on a college campus and you are a conservative thinker, you basically have to hide that side of you,â she said.
Evette expressed the need for âconsequencesâ when asked what her plans were to stop the censorship of dissenting views on college campuses if elected the Palmetto Stateâs next governor.
âIf you receive state taxpayer dollars, then you have to do the right thing, and you have to allow really free speech,â she said. âAnd that means no matter what you think, conservative or not. And so, I donât think it would take long for everybody to realize that the state means business.â
âI just think that weâre going to send a very good message to all institutions that you have to do the right thing, you have to do the right thing for all students, not just a portion of the students that sit on your campus,â she added, referring to the effort backed by Oremus and her colleagues.
Oremus told the DCNF that with regard to free speech, âeverybodyâs all on board until itâs the opposite viewpoint, but we canât be that way.â
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