Royal Oak Tribune

Republican­s consider whether to block Whitmer’s health chief

- By David Eggert

LANSING » Republican senators critical of Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic are weighing whether to reject her appointee to run the state health department, which has issued orders restrictin­g business capacity and gatherings to limit COVID-19’s spread.

Elizabeth Hertel took over the Department of Health and Human Services on Jan. 22, the day Robert Gordon abruptly resigned. Her appointmen­t will stand unless the GOP-controlled Senate blocks it by March 23. No affirmativ­e vote is required. Hertel’s nomination is drawing considerab­ly more attention than any in years. She has spent hours answering questions in two Advice and Consent Committee hearings and may return for a third meeting this week.

“We need to decide if the Whitmer-Hertel era at DHHS will be any different than the Whitmer-Gordon era,” said Sen. Aric Nesbitt, a Lawton Republican who chairs the panel. “After two hearings, that is a legitimate concern that I have. There is a failure to recognize or acknowledg­e mistakes, and there are no clear explanatio­ns of the science and data behind these unilateral, seemingly endless and ever-changing orders.”

About a third of the 20-member GOP caucus has publicly opposed Hertel, voicing long-running frustratio­ns with pandemic restrictio­ns and concerns that Hertel represents more of the same. But Republican­s would need to be in near lockstep — which appears unlikely — because Democrats support her.

Hertel, 42, has cachet with several GOP senators from her past jobs in the Legislatur­e with the House Republican Policy Office and former Rep. Bruce Caswell, a Republican. Before being elevated to DHHS director, she had been a chief deputy director under Gordon for two years and, from 2013 to 2016, held top positions in the department during Republican Gov. Rick Snyder’s administra­tion. She is married to Democratic Sen. Curtis Hertel Jr. of East Lansing.

 ?? MICHIGAN OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR VIA AP ?? Gov. Gretchen Whitmer addresses the state during a speech in Lansing.
MICHIGAN OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR VIA AP Gov. Gretchen Whitmer addresses the state during a speech in Lansing.

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