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South Carolina county Republican party leader dies from Covid-19

Pressley Stutts led a group loyal to former President Donald Trump in forcing out several local GOP officials who had opposed the state party chairman.
Image: Pressley Stutts
Pressley Stutts, chair of the Greenville Tea Party, speaks at the 'Liberty for All' event at the Spartanburg Memorial Auditorium, in Spartanburg, S.C., on July 10, 2021.Alex Hicks Jr / Spartanburg Herald-Journal via USA Today Network

GREENVILLE, S.C. — A tea party Republican who recently helped turn over the party leadership in South Carolina’s largest county has died from complications of Covid-19.

Pressley Stutts died Thursday, according to other party leaders and his family. The U.S. Navy veteran was 64.

Over the summer, Stutts led a group loyal to former President Donald Trump to force the resignation of several Greenville County Republican Party leaders after a failed bid to defeat state party chairman Drew McKissick.

Stutts said he was following Trump’s wishes to kick anyone who didn’t fully support the former president out of the Republican party.

Stutts had been hospitalized with Covid-19 since late July, frequently updating his health on Facebook.

In early August, he posted that Covid-19 was a serious and deadly man-made disease. The origin of the disease has not been determined by scientists.

Stutts said everyone should take the disease seriously, but was against mask mandates and felt people should not be pressured to get the vaccine and should not demand others get the shots.

“Mandates and coercions DO NOT WORK especially when they come to us from a government that has repeatedly lied to the American People time and time again,” Stutts wrote on his Facebook page.

His final post came five days before his death, when he wrote that he had chosen to go on a ventilator and planned to “wake up from this short rest and be back in the game soon!”

“This is my OWN decision. I trust God to keep me. I ask you to trust Him, too,” Stutts wrote.