One day before Rep. Nancy R. Mace’s planned talk at Harvard’s Institute of Politics, the firebrand South Carolina Republican was still lacing into the University online and in an interview with The Crimson.
While Wu was giving her testimony, Mace held up a sign with a quote on it that said, "[ICE] efforts actually threaten the safety of everyone."
U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace and Attorney General Alan Wilson, both Republicans, are both considering runs for governor in the 2026 election.
Rep. Nancy Mace is facing legal action if she doesn’t retract sexual assault allegations she leveled against four men during an inflammatory House floor speech in early February. “Brian does not have the luxury of a bully pulpit in the form of floor of Congress to address the many accusations you leveled against him on February 10,
You upended Brian (Musgrave’s) life when you accused him falsely of being a rapist, a predator and a sex trafficker,” attorneys Eric Bland and Ronald Richter wrote. “He is none of those things.”
Two men accused by GOP Rep. Nancy Mace of being predators are pushing back. Attorneys for Eric Musgrave sent a cease and desist letter to the congresswoman.
In an unprecedented spectacle in modern politics, the House chamber saw a Congressmen escorted out for heckling Donald Trump
South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson fired back at U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace after she accused him of failing to take her sexual abuse allegations seriously.