2026-06-10T09:00:00.000Z / https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2026/06/10/nancy-maces-trashing-south-carolina-governors-race-caps-rough-downfall/
联邦众议员南希·梅斯在周二南卡罗来纳州州长初选中的惨败,给这位曾冉冉升起的共和党新星带来了沉重打击。这位政客曾因戏剧性的政治转变而备受全国关注。
梅斯曾拥有真正的政治天赋与前途,但十余名南卡罗来纳州和华盛顿的前助手、同事及支持者在采访中表示,多年来肆无忌惮的政治投机、不惜一切代价博取媒体关注、拒绝顾问建议以及与众多盟友反目,最终导致她倒台并陷入孤立。
根据非官方计票结果,她在本次竞选中排名第五,甚至连自己的家乡县和选区都未能拿下。
梅斯于2020年翻棋盘Charleston地区选区席位当选国会议员,此后以温和派形象示人,吸引摇摆选民支持。她曾投票支持将同性婚姻权利写入法律,自称“支持跨性别权利”,并敦促共和党与民主党在堕胎问题上“寻求中间立场”。但到了去年,梅斯开始多次用“变性妖”(trannies)这类词汇嘲讽跨性别群体,并在社交媒体上贬低同性伴侣关系。近期,梅斯还暗示本州州长竞选的一名共和党对手“来自印度的贫民窟”。
她与前总统唐纳德·特朗普的关系同样反复无常。就职后不久,她便与特朗普保持距离,在2022年躲过了特朗普将其赶下台的企图,随后将自己重塑为“让美国再次伟大”(MAGA)阵营的斗士,在爱泼斯坦文件事件上与特朗普唱反调,并在州长竞选中寻求他的背书,最终却眼睁睁看着特朗普转而支持了竞争对手。没有一位知名共和党人为她的竞选活动背书。
梅斯的转变常常发生在她刻意吸引镜头的场合:电视采访、社交媒体上的自拍视频以及国会听证会上的激烈交锋。她的公开表现变得愈发好斗且怪异。
“我唯一的希望是她能得到所需的帮助,”前众议院共和党议长凯文·麦卡锡告诉《华盛顿邮报》,他表示近年来亲眼目睹梅斯“政治和个人生活分崩离析”。
麦卡锡曾在2020年帮助梅斯击败民主党人乔·坎宁安成功当选,但她在2023年出人意料地投票支持罢免他的议长职务,与右翼强硬派和民主党人站在一起,突然与他反目。此后,她在国会大厦外走动时,衬衫上佩戴了一枚巨大的鲜红色“A”字,称自己因那次投票被“妖魔化”。
“我帮她赢下了选举。但我只能看着她一路改变,”麦卡锡说道,他在2024年曾支持针对梅斯的一次未能成功的初选挑战。“有些人在她还是早期候选人时就警告过:‘小心点,她不太正常。’我当时没当回事。”
前助手们表示,梅斯很享受被描述为“孤身一人的核心小组”、身处“孤独政治孤岛”的形象。
梅斯和她的竞选团队未回复置评请求。她此前曾指责前助手管理资金不善并监视她,并驳斥了有关她过度关注吸引注意力的批评。
“我将永远感激南卡罗来纳州人民对我的信任,与我并肩作战,拒绝视而不见,”梅斯在周二晚间败选后在社交媒体上发帖称。“这不是战斗的终结。只是这个篇章的结束。”
公开失态行为
多年来,梅斯因刻意博取关注而在华盛顿引发诸多争议,例如她在与一名寄养权益活动家握手时佩戴手臂吊带,指责对方实施“跨性别暴力”——导致该男子因袭击罪名被捕,最终检方撤销了指控。在州长竞选前几个月,她的行为愈发令旁观者困惑不解。
在与前未婚夫分手期间,梅斯于2025年2月在众议院议事厅发表了近一小时的演讲,指控他和另外三名男子强奸及其他性犯罪,这些男子均否认了指控。数月后,在一场关于监视问题的国会听证会上,她展示了一张自己的“裸体剪影”照片,称照片是在未经她同意的情况下拍摄的。
2025年4月,梅斯在一家化妆品店拍摄了一段视频,视频中她反复咒骂一名询问她计划何时举办下次市政厅会议的选民。
一周半后,副总统JD·万斯访问南卡罗来纳州休格市的一家钢铁厂时,梅斯当面质问坐在当地民选官员身旁的侄子约翰·梅斯·麦格拉思。她站在他面前,用手指着他的脸,斥责他接受了州司法部长艾伦·威尔逊在当地党主席竞选中的背书——而威尔逊正是她在冗长的众议院演讲中多次批评的对象,后来还将与她竞争州长职位。
“你接受艾伦的背书是犯了错,总有一天你会为此付出代价,”梅斯对这位26岁的年轻人说道,据两名目睹了2025年5月1日这一场景的人士透露,该场景此前从未被报道过。这两人要求匿名,称不想引来梅斯更多的怒火。
败选后,梅斯背书了威尔逊参加州长 runoff 选举,尽管过去一年来她多次指责威尔逊是“恋童癖保护者”。
最引人注目的一次失态发生在去年10月,查尔斯顿机场官员报告称,梅斯因对安检陪同安排存在误解,辱骂机场工作人员和警察。一份该事件的警方报告描述了一场充满脏话的咆哮,她称机场警察“他妈地无能”。
她所在选区的数十名当地民选官员联名写信谴责她的行为,该州共和党参议员蒂姆·斯科特和林赛·格雷厄姆也批评了她的举动。梅斯拒绝道歉,威胁起诉机场诽谤,并称该事件报告是“捏造的”。
“人们可以说她疯了,但他们依然在谈论她,”奥斯汀·麦卡宾说道,他曾是梅斯的政治顾问,因在竞选决策和薪酬问题上存在分歧而于去年12月辞职。“这种情况有点像,只要你的名字拼写正确,那就万事大吉了。”
不断转变的政治形象
这位前州议员进入国会几天后,在2021年1月6日国会山遇袭事件后批评特朗普,称他在共和党中已没有未来。
时任梅斯通讯总监娜塔莉·约翰逊告诉《邮报》,在骚乱发生期间,梅斯曾告诉助手,她想出去“被暴徒打一顿,这样就能上电视”。但约翰逊表示,几个月后,梅斯委托的一项民调显示她对特朗普的批评在其选区不受欢迎,于是她开始减少对特朗普的批评。
“我不知道有谁会像南希·梅斯这样,时刻盯着风向看哪边吹,”该州资深共和党政治操盘手贾斯汀·埃文斯说道,他曾支持梅斯竞选州众议院议员,如今为帕姆·埃维特工作。埃维特获得特朗普背书,在周二的州长初选中排名第一。“她曾是一位外形出众、善于沟通的人才,拥有社交媒体粉丝,具备成功候选人应有的所有特质。只是她完全丧失了道德准则。”
就职后不久,梅斯就展现出了强大的政治影响力,她的身世经历极具感染力:16岁时遭遇强奸,高中辍学后曾在华夫饼屋做服务员,后来成为毕业于The Citadel军校的首位女性毕业生。
多尔切斯特县共和党主席CJ·韦斯特福尔曾参与梅斯2022年连任竞选的竞选活动,称她鼓舞人心且工作努力。他将梅斯当年的胜选归功于共和党人认为她是“独立声音”,尽管特朗普对此表示反对。
韦斯特福尔表示,自那以后,梅斯的戏剧化倾向愈发明显,并称她是一个“爱哭的霸凌者”,喜欢挑起争议,然后在有人反击时“扮演受害者”。
败选后,梅斯称她敢于挑战权势,哪怕这会让她在政治上付出代价。
“我投出的每一张票、召集的每一场听证会、发起的每一场斗争——始终都是为了你们,”她在社交媒体帖子中写道。“我见过好人保持沉默会发生什么。也见过好人挺身而出会发生什么。我每次都会选择后者。”
国会中的紧张盟友关系
2023年秋季梅斯投票罢免麦卡锡后不久,众议员唐·培根(内布拉斯加州共和党人)在雷伯恩食堂遇到了几名正在吃午餐的梅斯的国会助手,询问他们为谁工作。
“我以前真的很喜欢她,”培根说道。“现在不了。我们没法和她共事。”
他告诉《邮报》,梅斯刚进入众议院时他和她相处得不错,但她投票罢免议长“对我们很多人来说都是难以接受的打击”。
有时,梅斯会与自由派民主党人结盟,包括加州众议员罗·卡纳和马里兰州众议员杰米·拉斯金。
“她与民主党人的互动方式是很少有共和党人能做到的,因为她曾站在性暴力和性骚扰受害者一边,”拉斯金说道。“共和党方面的很多人都想迅速把这些事情掩盖起来,而南希在她更思想开放、不受拘束的时刻,愿意站在民主党人这边。”
梅斯和卡纳曾共同创立了一个聚焦于负担得起的儿童保育的联合核心小组,但在梅斯开始执着于跨性别议题后,两人基本停止了联合亮相。针对2024年首位公开跨性别身份的议员萨拉·麦克布莱德(特拉华州民主党人)的当选,梅斯提出了一项决议,禁止跨性别女性在国会大厦使用女性洗手间。
不过,梅斯去年签署了卡纳和肯塔基州众议员托马斯·马西发起的一项成功请愿书,要求公开与被定罪性犯罪者杰弗里·爱泼斯坦相关的联邦调查文件。
她称希望为爱泼斯坦的受害者伸张正义,尽管特朗普最初反对公开这些文件。但梅斯的这一决定让她日益缩减的助手团队感到意外,因为当时她一心想要获得总统对其州长竞选的背书。
争取特朗普背书
据一位熟悉两人沟通情况的人士透露,2025年8月梅斯宣布竞选州长前几天,她曾试图致电特朗普提前告知此事。她给总统留下了一条语音留言,特朗普随后给她发了一条表示祝福的短信。但当特朗普同时转发了两项民调,显示她在假想竞选中处境艰难时,梅斯慌了神。几天后,梅斯委托自己的民调,结果显示她在参选阵营中领先,且知名度最高。
梅斯将这份民调发给了总统,总统当月便在Truth Social上发布了该民调,未加任何评论——政治操盘手们表示,这为她尚处于起步阶段的竞选活动增添了可信度。
在竞选的最后几天,梅斯多次表示,她支持公开爱泼斯坦文件是特朗普未背书她的原因。总统并未公开批评她支持该行动。
梅斯的国会办公室人员流动频繁,一些人是被她解雇的,另一些人则以工作条件恶劣为由辞职。有一次,在她投票罢免麦卡锡后的三个月内,她的九人团队全部换了一遍。
梅斯还难以维持政治盟友关系。她曾谈及对前州长妮基·黑利的喜爱,黑利在2022年艰难的连任初选中支持过梅斯。但第二年,当黑利寻求她在2024年总统竞选的背书时,梅斯却保持沉默,随后在为特朗普竞选时猛烈抨击黑利。
“我认为南希·梅斯这辈子见过的每一座桥,都被她烧光了,”她的前通讯总监威尔·汉普森说道。
汉普森表示,他的前老板清楚自己正处于孤立无援的境地,但不确定她是否意识到这是自己造成的。
“她既是自己最好的武器,”他说道,“也是自己最糟糕的敌人。”
艾琳·考克斯为本报道撰稿。
Once a rising star, Nancy Mace suffers resounding defeat in governor’s race
2026-06-10T09:00:00.000Z / https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2026/06/10/nancy-maces-trashing-south-carolina-governors-race-caps-rough-downfall/
Rep. Nancy Mace’s trouncing in Tuesday’s South Carolina gubernatorial primary dealt a blunt defeat to a once rising GOP star, a politician who had basked in national attention during her dramatic political transformation.
Mace had real political talent and promise,but her downfall and isolation followed years of brazen political opportunism, a hunger for media attention at any cost, rejecting advisers’ counsel and turning on many allies, more than a dozen former aides, colleagues and supporters in both South Carolina and Washington said in interviews.
She finished fifth in the contest, according to unofficial returns,solidly losing even her own home county and district.
Mace arrived in Congress after flipping a Charleston-area district in 2020 and built a reputation as a moderate who appealed to swing voters.She voted to codify same-sex marriage rights, called herself “pro transgender rights” and urged her party to “meet in the middle” with Democrats on abortion. By last year, Mace had begun repeatedly mocking transgender people as “trannies” and disparaged gay relationships on social media. In recent days, Mace suggested a Republican opponent in the governor’s race came from “a slum in India.”
Her relationship with President Donald Trump was similarly mercurial. She distanced herself from him soon after taking office, survived his attempt to oust her in 2022, rebranded herself as a MAGA warrior, defied Trump on the Epstein files and sought his endorsement in the governor’s race, only to watch him back a rival. No high-profile Republican endorsed her campaign.
The spectacle of Mace’s transformation often unfolded on the cameras she gravitated toward in television interviews, selfie videos posted on social media and dramatic exchanges in committee hearings. Her public appearances grew increasingly combative and bizarre.
“The only thing I hope is she gets the help she needs,” former Republican House speaker Kevin McCarthy told The Washington Post, saying he watched as her “political and personal life unraveled” in recent years.
Mace, whom McCarthy had helped unseat Democrat Joe Cunningham in 2020, cast an unexpected vote for his ouster as speaker in 2023, joining right-wing hard-liners and Democrats as she abruptly turned on him. She later walked around the Capitol wearing a large scarlet “A” on her shirt, because she said she had been “demonized” for that vote.
“I helped her win. But I just watched her change along the way,” said McCarthy, who supported an unsuccessful primary challenge to Mace in 2024. “Some people warned when she was an early candidate, ‘Watch out, she’s not all there.’ I didn’t.”
Former staff said Mace embraced stories about her being a “caucus of one”on a “lonely political island.”
Mace and her campaign did not return requests for comment. She previously accused her former staff of mismanaging money and spying on her, and has dismissed criticism that she is overly focused on getting attention.
“I will always be grateful for the people of South Carolina who trusted me, fought with me, and refused to look the other way,” Mace posted on social media after her loss Tuesday evening. “This isn’t the end of the fight. It’s just the end of this chapter.”
Public outbursts
Mace raised eyebrows in Washington year after year for drawing attention to herself, such as wearing an arm sling after accusing a foster care activist of “trans violence” during a handshake — having him arrested on assault charges only for prosecutors to drop the case. Her behavior in the months preceding her gubernatorial run became even more confounding to those observing it.
In the throes of her split from her ex-fiancé, Mace in February 2025 spoke on the House floor for nearly an hour, accusing him and three other men of rape and other sex crimes, which the men denied. During a congressional hearing on surveillance months later, she showed a “naked silhouette” photo of herself, saying it was taken without her consent.
In April 2025, Mace posted a video she took at a makeup store where she repeatedly cursed out a constituent who asked when she planned to host her next town hall.
A week and a half later, Mace confronted her nephew John Mace McGrath as he sat next to local elected officials during Vice President JD Vance‘s visit to a steel plant in Huger, South Carolina. She stood over him and pointed her finger in his face as she upbraided him for accepting an endorsement in a local party chairman race from state Attorney General Alan Wilson, whom she had also criticized during her lengthy House floor speech and would later run against her for governor.
“You f—ed up taking Alan’s endorsement, and you’re going to pay for that someday,” Mace said to the 26-year-old, according to two people who witnessed the May 1, 2025,scene, which has not previously been reported. The people spoke on the condition of anonymity, saying they did not want to attract any additional wrath from Mace.
After conceding Tuesday, Mace endorsed Wilson in the gubernatorial runoff, despite repeatedly accusing him in the last year of being a “pedophile protector.”
The highest-profile eruption took place in October, when officials at Charleston airport reported that Mace had berated airport staff and police after a misunderstanding about her security escort preferences. A police report of the encounter described an expletive-laced tirade where she called airport police “F—ing incompetent.”
Dozens of local elected officials in her district signed a letter condemning her behavior, and the state’s Republican senators, Tim Scott and Lindsey Graham, criticized her actions. Mace refused to apologize, threatening to sue the airport for defamation and claiming the incident report had been “fabricated.”
“People can say she’s crazy, but they’re still talking about her,” said Austin McCubbin, Mace’s former political adviser who resigned in December after disagreements about campaign decisions and compensation. “It’s kind of one of those things where just so long as you spell my name correctly, that’s all that matters.”
Shifting political persona
Days after the former state lawmaker entered Congress, Mace criticized Trump in the aftermath of the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol, saying she did not believe he had a future in the Republican Party.
As the insurrection unfolded, Mace told aides she wanted to go out and get punched by rioters “so she could get on TV,” Natalie Johnson, her communications director at the time, told The Post. But Mace months later decided to pare back criticisms of Trump after a poll she commissioned showed they were unpopular in her district, Johnson said.
“I don’t know of anybody who puts their finger in the wind and tries to see which way it’s blowing more than Nancy Mace,” said Justin Evans, a longtime GOP political operative in the state who supported her state House run and now works for Pam Evette, the Trump-endorsed candidate who placed first in Tuesday’s gubernatorial primary. “She was a good-looking, talented communicator, had the social media following, had all the ingredients that a successful candidate should have. It’s just her moral compass was completely missing.”
Soon after entering office, Mace had shown herself to be a powerful force in politics who told a compelling backstory. A rape survivor at 16 and high school dropout who once worked as a Waffle House waitress, she became the first woman to graduate from The Citadel.
CJ Westfall, chairman of the Dorchester County Republican Party who worked on Mace’s 2022 general election campaign, described her as inspiring and hardworking. He credited her win that year to Republicans believing she was an “independent voice,” despite Trump’s opposition.
Since then, Westfall said her penchant for drama became clear and described her as a “crybully” who liked to provoke controversy and then “play the victim” when someone pushed back.
After her defeat, Mace said she challenged the powerful even if it cost her politically.
“Every vote I cast, every hearing I called, every fight I picked — it was always for you,” she wrote in a social media post. “I’ve seen what happens when good people stay quiet. And I’ve seen what happens when they don’t. I would choose the latter every single time.”
Strained alliances in Congress
Soon after Mace’s vote to oust McCarthy in fall 2023, Rep. Don Bacon (R-Nebraska) greeted several of Mace’s congressional staff eating lunch at the Rayburn cafeteria and asked who they worked for.
“I used to really like her,” Bacon replied. “Not anymore. We can’t work with her.”
He told The Post he got along with her during her early time in the House, but her vote to push the speaker out “was a tough pill for many of us to swallow.”
At times, Mace allied with liberal Democrats including Reps. Ro Khanna of California and Jamie Raskin of Maryland.
“She would interact with Democrats in a way very few Republicans do, because she has sided with victims of sexual violence and sexual harassment,” Raskin said. “A lot of the people on the GOP side want to quickly brush those subjects under the rug, and Nancy, in her more freethinking, uninhibited moments, is willing to side with Democrats.”
Mace and Khanna, who had founded a joint caucus focusing on affordable child care, largely stopped their joint appearances after Mace fixated on transgender people.Mace introduced a resolution to ban transgender women from using women’s restrooms in the Capitol, in response to the 2024 election of Rep. Sarah McBride (D-Delaware) as the first openly transgender member.
Mace, however, signed on to a successful petition last year by Khanna and Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Kentucky) to release federal investigation files related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
She said she wanted justice for Epstein’s victims, even though Trump initially opposed the release of the files. But Mace’s decision surprised her own dwindling team of aides because she was bent on getting the president’s endorsement for her gubernatorial run.
Wooing Trump
A few days before Mace announced her run for governor in August 2025, she tried calling Trump to give him a heads-up. She left a voicemail for the president, who later texted her with well wishes, according to a person familiar with their communication who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss private conversations.But Mace panicked when Trump also passed along two polls that showed her struggling in a hypothetical race. Mace commissioned her own poll days later that showed her leading the field and with the highest name recognition.
Mace sent the poll to the president, who then posted it to Truth Social that month without comment — which political operatives said lent credibility to her nascent campaign.
In the final days of the race, Mace repeatedly said her support for releasing the Epstein files was the reason Trump did not endorse her. The president did not publicly criticize her for supporting the effort.
Mace’s congressional office frequently shed staff,some of whom she forced out, while others resigned citing difficult work conditions. At one point, in a three-month span after her McCarthy vote, her entire nine-member staff had turned over.
Mace also struggled to maintain political allies. She spoke of her love for former governor Nikki Haley, who backed Mace in the difficult 2022 reelection primary. But Mace went silent the next year when Haley sought her endorsement in her 2024 presidential run, and proceeded to blast Haley while campaigning for Trump.
“I don’t think Nancy Mace has ever seen a bridge in her life that she hasn’t burned down,” said Will Hampson, one of her former communications directors.
Hampson said his former boss was self aware that she was on an island. But he’s not sure if she recognizes she put herself there.
“She was her own best weapon,” he said, “and own worst enemy.”
Erin Cox contributed to this report.
发表回复