SC Politics

Joe White: Why I Cannot Support Rom Reddy for Governor

“Temperament matters. Integrity matters…”

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by JOE WHITE

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Over the last several months, many people have asked me why I cannot support Rom Reddy for governor of South Carolina. I believe the people who follow me deserve an honest and factual answer based on my own firsthand experiences and interactions.

When I first met Rom Reddy in March of 2025, my impression was very positive.

A friend asked me to meet with Mr. Reddy, and with his permission, three fellow S.C. Freedom Caucus members joined me for that meeting on March 28, 2025, at his office in Charleston. The meeting lasted roughly two hours. During that meeting, Mr. Reddy expressed strong philosophical agreement with the goals and principles of the South Carolina Freedom Caucus. He talked about helping recruit conservative candidates, growing the movement, and changing the direction of South Carolina government.

At that time, Mr. Reddy had created an organization called DOGE SC. Following that meeting, I made a small personal contribution to DOGE SC and even posted publicly on Facebook that while I am naturally skeptical of new political organizations, I was encouraged by my interaction with Rom Reddy and supportive of the effort.

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Over the following months, I continued communicating and meeting with Mr. Reddy. We discussed conservative policy, candidate recruitment, and ways to strengthen the Freedom Caucus movement in South Carolina. Philosophically, almost every interaction initially seemed aligned with my own beliefs and with the principles publicly espoused by the Freedom Caucus.

However, as time passed, my concerns began to grow.

One important moment occurred during a meeting in April of 2025 involving a businessman friend from Newberry County whom I had introduced to Mr. Reddy. During that meeting, disagreements emerged, and I personally observed a level of agitation and intensity that concerned me. That experience stayed with me.

Over the months that followed, I observed other moments that also caused me concern regarding how disagreements and criticism were handled. By the fall of 2025, it became increasingly clear to me that my relationship with Mr. Reddy was deteriorating.

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(Provided)

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The turning point came during a phone conversation on October 28, 2025. Mr. Reddy and political consultant Wesley Donehue were on the call, and my wife was present with me while I was on speakerphone. The conversation began cordially, but disagreement arose over the issue of whether Freedom Caucus members should rejoin the Republican caucus without removal of Rule 16B, a rule prohibiting members from campaigning against incumbent Republican caucus members.

I made clear that I would not support rejoining the caucus unless that rule was removed.

During that conversation, Mr. Reddy stated to me, “I will destroy you and I will begin today.” I responded, “bring it on,” and the conversation ended.

Later that same day, Mr. Reddy sent me a text message apologizing for the heated nature of the conversation. In that text, he wrote in part, “I do not often get into heated conversations, so my apologies.”

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I accepted the apology at the time and chose not to publicly identify him when I later referenced the incident in a Facebook post.

What I can say today is this: leadership is about far more than philosophy alone. It is about steadiness, humility, judgment, temperament, and the ability to handle disagreement without personal hostility. It is about how a person reacts under pressure and how they treat people who do not fully agree with them.

My concerns about Rom Reddy are not rooted in one single disagreement or one isolated conversation. They are based on the overall pattern of interactions and observations I personally experienced over many months.

I also believe that when someone seeks the highest office in South Carolina, the public should have a long-term understanding of that person’s background, relationships, leadership style, and temperament. In my personal opinion, I simply do not feel that I know enough, or have seen enough consistency, to support Rom Reddy for governor.

This is not written out of anger or bitterness. In fact, I initially supported Mr. Reddy’s efforts and hoped we could work together to advance conservative reform in South Carolina.

But leadership matters. Temperament matters. Integrity matters.

After careful thought and based on my own firsthand experiences, I cannot support Rom Reddy for governor of South Carolina.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR…

Joe White (File)

Joe White is a retired businessman and proud member of the S.C. Freedom Caucus who represents South Carolina House District 40 in the General Assembly.

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9 comments

Caroline May 13, 2026 at 6:55 am

Rep. White, thank you for your honesty. I may not always agree with your policy positions, but I can certainly say that you always conduct yourself with integrity and look out for the best interest of your constituents, and I highly respect that.

Reply
Veni,vidi,vici Top fan May 13, 2026 at 8:14 am

Who are the tatted up thugs that Reddy uses for protection? They look like Eastern European or Chechens that Putin would use

Reply
J Doe May 13, 2026 at 9:05 am

Your timeline isn’t computing.

You first met him on March 28, 2025, and you say you continued to meet with him over the following months to discuss philosophy, recruit candidates, and work together. However, in April, less than a month after your first meeting with him, you saw agitation and intensity in him that concerned you and stayed with you.

Even though you had questions about his temperament and ability to handle disagreements less than a month after you met him, you continued to work with him? That may say something about you putting political ideology over sound leadership and judgment.

Reply
AJ Top fan May 14, 2026 at 1:15 pm

wonder if this is Wesley D?….

Reply
Carolina Cavalier Top fan May 13, 2026 at 9:17 am

That pic with his tatted thugs speaks volumes. Also, isn’t that Pascoe on stage with him?

Reply
Squishy123 (the original) May 13, 2026 at 9:58 am

Reddy wouldn’t allow White to join the Lollipop Guild.

Reply
Nanker Phelge May 13, 2026 at 11:56 am

He could have just said it’s because he’s a weird little freak who talks funny.

Reply
jbl1a May 14, 2026 at 6:01 am

Reddy started out with DOGE SC to help identify and cut govt waste and liberal spending. Fast forward a few months he dropped that and moved to fixing the judicial system. Then earlier this year he changed it all up to “I’m running for governor”? If that’s not a major political grift I don’t know what is. One thing for sure he would fit right in with the uniparty antics of the SC govt system.

Reply
AJ Top fan May 14, 2026 at 1:16 pm

Rom’s mask slipped didn’t it?

Reply

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