
First on Fox: Republican firebrand Nancy Mace launches bid for South Carolina governor
"I'm running to put South Carolina first," Mace, a three-term House member who represents a coastal congressional district in the state's Lowcountry, said in a statement shared first with Fox News Digital.
Mace, as she launched her campaign, argued that "we can continue doing the things we've always done," as she took aim at what she called "weak leadership" in the state.
"Or we can chart a new course – one filled with common sense and bold policies to hold the line for South Carolina," she emphasized.
And Mace went up on a newly launched campaign website with a 10-point agenda that she called "a clear, conservative, common sense roadmap to rebuild South Carolina from the ground up:"
Mace is following her announcement with a campaign policy event Monday morning in Charleston at the Citadel, which is South Carolina's public military college and her alma mater.
Mace enters a crowded GOP primary field in the 2026 race to succeed term-limited Republican Gov. Henry McMaster, who is the Palmetto State's longest-serving governor.
South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson, Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette and state Sen. Josh Kimbrell are all seeking the GOP nomination in the reliably red state. They were joined a week ago by Republican Rep. Ralph Norman, who declared his candidacy.
Mace, in a recent interview with Fox News Digital ahead of her launch, said that "we're starting out front, in the lead, and it's a two-man race" between her and Wilson.
And she pledged that "I will fight to the finish, and I will take out South Carolina's Attorney General, because he's turned a blind eye on women and on children and on the state for a lot of reasons. He might force me to do this."
Mace, in a bombshell speech on the U.S. House floor in February, alleged that Wilson ignored evidence of sexual assault against her and other women. In her hour-long speech, Mace accused four men, including her ex-fiance, of sexual crimes and said she was among the victims.
Wilson vehemently denied Mace's accusations, saying at the time "that allegation was never made to me — no one in my office."
Wilson, in a statement to Fox News a week ago, argued that "Nancy Mace is a liar who will do anything to get attention to distract from her liberal voting record. I've served our country and dedicated my civilian career to protecting children."
"Her attacks are, again, categorically false and are just a distraction from her liberal agenda," he added. "South Carolina families need a Governor who will fight for our values, not someone who will compromise them for political gain and social media clicks."
And Wilson's campaign highlighted that every sheriff in Mace's congressional district has endorsed his campaign for governor.
Mace, who dropped out of high school at age 17, and worked at a Waffle House before eventually becoming the first female graduate of the Citadel's Corps of Cadets, won election to Congress in 2020. She defeated Democratic Rep. Joe Cunningham, to become the state's first Republican woman elected to the House.
Mace, who worked on President Donald Trump's 2016 presidential campaign, strongly criticized his actions surrounding the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol, when Trump supporters attempted to upend congressional certification of now-former President Joe Biden's victory in the 2020 election.
Trump backed a primary challenger against Mace when she was up for re-election in 2022, but she successfully won re-nomination and re-election.
Mace later came to Trump's defense after the then-former president was indicted for mishandling classified documents. And she endorsed Trump in the 2024 Republican presidential primaries, as he topped a large field of rivals, including former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley.
Trump's grip over the GOP, thanks to his 2024 victory to win back the White House, is stronger than ever, and his endorsements in GOP nomination races are extremely influential.
Asked if she could land the president's endorsement, Mace told Fox News Digital, "I'll be working very hard if I get in to earn his support."
And in her campaign launch video, Mace uses a clip of Trump calling her a "fighter" in a speech, and adding that "when she sets her sight on something, she's tough."
Mace has leaned hard into cultural issues in recent years, including leading the charge to prevent Democratic Rep. Sarah McBride of Delaware, the first openly transgender member of Congress, from using the women's restrooms in the House.
And Mace, in her campaign launch, vowed to defend what she called "biological reality and stop the radical gender agenda."
"No child is born in the wrong body. No boy belongs in a girls' locker room. And no teenage girl should lose her scholarship to a boy in a skirt," she argued. "I've already started shutting down this woke ideology at South Carolina schools, and will do significantly more to gut this abusive ideology and ship it out of state."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNN
2 minutes ago
- CNN
Former senior Biden aide to appear before House committee in probe of former president's alleged mental decline
A longtime aide to Joe Biden is set to sit for a transcribed interview in House Republicans' probe of the former president's potential cognitive decline and possible efforts to conceal it from the public. Bruce Reed, the former White House deputy chief of staff for policy, is scheduled to appear before the House Oversight Committee Tuesday as part of the Republican-led panel's investigation. He's just the latest Biden White House official to do so, and the first of two top former White House aides scheduled to appear this week. Former senior adviser to the president for communications Anita Dunn is set to appear Thursday, and the committee is expected to hold more voluntary interviews in the coming weeks. During the Biden administration, Reed oversaw much of the domestic policy agenda in the White House. He had also played a role in preparing Biden for his presidential debate against Donald Trump – a disastrous event for Biden that eventually led to his exit from the race altogether. The panel has conducted a number of interviews with former Biden officials in recent weeks, with varying degrees of cooperation. Former Biden counselor Steve Ricchetti and onetime senior adviser Mike Donilon voluntarily sat for transcribed interviews last week. Others have been subpoenaed to appear. Compelled to testify, White House physician Dr. Kevin O'Connor, former assistant to the president and senior adviser to the first lady Anthony Bernal and former assistant to the president and deputy chief of staff Annie Tomasini all invoked their Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.


Washington Post
2 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Live updates: Texas Democrats delay redistricting to a Trump-backed election map
During a special legislative session called by Gov. Greg Abbott (R), where lawmakers aim to redraw Texas's election map — a move backed by President Donald Trump — the state legislature will reconvene Tuesday for a second straight day without dozens of Democrats, who left the state to block the map's passage. Blue-led states California, Illinois and New York have said they are considering redistricting as a response to Texas, proposals that Abbott called 'crazy bluster' Monday night on Fox News. One opponent of California's potential redistricting plans? Former governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, the Republican who helped lead the effort to create his state's independent redistricting process. Schwarzenegger, his spokesman said, 'is the rare former politician who thinks gerrymanders are evil no matter which party does them.' Trump has one event on his public schedule Tuesday: signing an executive order in the afternoon. Michael Abramowitz, the director of Voice of America, has been fired after refusing to accept what he called an 'illegal' reassignment to run a broadcasting station in North Carolina, according to a new court filing on Monday. A letter sent Friday by John A. Zadrozny, a senior adviser at the U.S. Agency for Global Media, which oversees VOA, said Abramowitz would be terminated after 30 days notice, on Aug. 31. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's acting chief of staff tried and failed to oust a senior White House liaison assigned to the Pentagon, people familiar with the matter said Monday, detailing an unusual dispute that marks the latest instance of infighting among a staff plagued by disagreement and distrust. Former California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, who helped lead the effort to create his state's independent redistricting process through ballot measures in 2008 and 2010, is opposed to the gerrymandering effort underway by GOP leaders in Texas. But he also is concerned about the effort California Democrats are embarking on to temporarily create more partisan maps in their state as a countermeasure to Texas. Schwarzenegger, his spokesman said Monday, 'is the rare former politician who thinks gerrymanders are evil no matter which party does them.' A government agency best known for its number-crunching prowess became the target of the president's criticism last week when a federal jobs report was revised to show a less-than-rosy economic picture. President Donald Trump ordered the firing of Bureau of Labor Statistics Commissioner Erika McEntarfer after a bleak jobs report showed signs of a slowing economy and revised figures revealed things were worse for the labor market than initially reported in May and June.


New York Times
2 minutes ago
- New York Times
A Tussle in Texas
It's an old trick: If you can't win a vote, make sure it doesn't happen. That's what Texas Democrats had in mind when they fled Austin on Sunday. If they're elsewhere, their state's Legislature won't have enough members present to vote on a measure they revile: a new gerrymandered congressional map that would probably flip five blue districts to red. Those extra seats would give the G.O.P. a much more comfortable majority in Washington — and answer a fervent demand from President Trump. So Democrats high-tailed it out of town. Some went to Chicago or Boston. Others to Albany, N.Y. They are giving press conferences to vent their outrage. Now, what started as a redistricting clash has turned into a nationwide game of hide-and-seek. Greg Abbott, the Texas governor, says he'll oust Democratic lawmakers who don't return for the vote. Our reporters have been on the ground in Texas, Illinois and New York. Today, we'll explain the situation. The Texas plan What does the state's redistricting proposal look like? J. David Goodman, who reported from Austin, explains. Republican lawmakers here hope to pick up five more seats in the U.S. House. (They currently hold 25 of the state's 38 congressional seats.) So they want to either dramatically reshape, or completely relocate, five districts now held by Democrats. Three are in urban areas — in Houston and Dallas, and around Austin and San Antonio. The other two are along the Mexican border, where the majority Hispanic population has trended Republican in recent elections. The map could also force veteran Democratic legislators to fight primary campaigns against young and promising members of the party. The new Austin seat, for instance, might pit Lloyd Doggett, a veteran congressman, against a rising progressive. Al Green, a vocal Trump opponent, has been drawn into a vacant district around Houston where several young candidates are already running. Current districts 11 districts Harris +10 or greater 2 districts within a 10-pt margin 25 districts Trump +10 or greater +20 0 +20 +40 or greater +10 Harris +10 Trump +40 or greater Proposed districts 8 districts (–3) 0 districts (–2) 30 districts (+5) +20 0 +20 +40 or greater +10 Harris +10 Trump +40 or greater Current districts 11 districts Harris +10 or greater 2 districts within a 10-pt margin 25 districts Trump +10 or greater +40 or greater +30 +20 +10 Harris 0 +10 Trump +20 +30 +40 or greater Proposed districts 8 districts (–3) 0 districts (–2) 30 districts (+5) +30 +20 0 +20 +30 +40 or greater +10 Harris +10 Trump +40 or greater By Ashley Cai Want all of The Times? Subscribe.