Nancy Mace, the South Carolina Republican congresswoman, often tells her staff that sheâs a self-taught coderâjust one aspect of how Mace presents her tech expertise, as befits her role in shaping the GOPâs policies on technology and work as chair of the House subcommittee on Cybersecurity, Information Technology, and Government Innovation.
âI would say at least a weekly comment, if not daily,â says one of several former Mace staffers who spoke with WIRED. Another found her high regard for her skills somewhat at odds with her demonstrated ability. (Like all the staffers WIRED spoke with, they requested anonymity because they fear reprisal from their former boss.)
A principalâand unusualâuse to which Mace put her skills, according to former staffers, was setting up burner accounts on a variety of social media platforms to monitor what people were saying about her and bolster her image. They also claim she requested that staffers make their own burner accounts to defend her online.
âWe had to make multiple accounts, burner accounts, and go and reply to comments, saying things that werenât trueâeven Reddit forums,â a former staffer says. âWe were congressional staff, and there were actual things we could be doing to help the constituents.â
âIt would be a slap in the face to taxpayers across the country for me to spent time on their dime commenting on my bosses personal life,â Sydney Long, Maceâs communications director, writes in an email to WIRED. âThe only relationship the Congresswoman cares about is her one with South Carolina. She is married to her job and that is all the media should care about.â Maceâs office did not answer a detailed list of questions on the programming languages in which she is proficient and what types of devices she uses for coding.
Mace, who staff said once identified as a ânever Trumper,â has become one of the presidentâs staunchest allies on Capitol Hill. Sheâs willing to go to more extreme lengths than many of her colleagues to attack Trumpâs enemies and gain ample attention online in the process, like introducing a resolution to stop transgender people from using bathrooms that align with their gender identity, rather than biological sex, in federal buildings. (This legislation, Mace confirmed, purposefully targeted Representative Sarah McBride from Delaware, the first openly transgender member of Congress.) She also has a guiding hand on technology policy; earlier this year, for example, she re-introduced a bill she previously co-sponsored in 2023, the Modernizing Government Technology Reform Act, which, if passed and signed into law, would require a sweeping audit of legacy federal IT systems.
Recently, Mace showed a ânaked silhouetteâ of herself during a House subcommittee hearing on surveillance as part of a running string of allegations sheâs made against her ex-fiancé, South Carolina businessman Patrick Bryant, whom she accused of physically assaulting her and of possessing images of âunderage girlsâ in an explosive floor speech in February. During the speech, she alleged three other men had committed various other crimes, including sexual abuse, sex trafficking, and taking videos of sexual acts without their consent. Bryant and the three other men have denied Maceâs accusations and did not respond to requests for comment from WIRED. (Because Maceâs comments were made on the House floor, she may be sheltered by the Constitutionâs speech and debate clause, which protects lawmakers from lawsuits related to their legislative actions.)