Exclusive: Rep. Nancy Mace, RS.C. She is instructing employees to create so-called "burner" accounts to improve her image online, and telling Fox News Digital about the allegations, telling Fox News Digital that the claims come from "bitter exes" and lack of any real evidence.
"When a story relies on 'anonymous former staff'" Recent articles Published by Wired Magazine.
The article quoted testimony from former assistants and consultants, including political consultant Wesley Donehue, saying Mays used burner accounts, and even automated robots to amplify her political messaging.
Exclusive: Nancy Mace uninstalled after being arrested after being arrested, allegedly threatening to "assassinate" her
Nancy Mays (RS.C. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)
However, Mace chaired the House Subcommittee on Cybersecurity, Information Technology and Government Innovation, but did not buy it.
"Unlike some people, I don't need a burner phone to tell the truth," she said. "I said what I mean, I mean what I said, and then I posted my name from my real account. Accountability started here."
As anonymous sources dominate headlines, Mace speaks out the quiet part loudly, leaning towards her reputation.
"I'll keep saying the unsettling facts," she added. "If that makes you squirt, that's great. It means you're finally paying attention."
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President Donald Trump shook hands with Rep. Nancy Mace at a joint meeting of Congress at the U.S. Capitol on March 4. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)
Mace has built her brand to fight for survivors including her own sexual assault and advocate for policies that protect women and parents’ rights. She has publicly legislated legislation to protect IX title protections for biological women and expand opportunities for resources for survivors of violence.
Earlier this month, she called a transgender person accused of threatening to “assassinate” her, saying: “You don’t have to agree with me, but threatening violence against mothers and women in Congress is not a protest, it is a crime.”
In the interview, Mace pointed out her real-life experience in Congress’s rare technology as a major asset in developing meaningful policies.
“Well, for beginners, I actually understand the complexity of technology, which has put me ahead of most of Washington,” Mays said. “We are writing policies designed to protect your data, combat cyber threats and oppose large-scale technology censorship.”
Rep. Nancy Mays (RC (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)
Her hands-on experience helped her software flaws and political spin, she said.
“It turns out that writing code will teach you to find errors in software and political BS,” Metz said.
When asked how she kept her office working online based on conservative principles such as responsibility and leadership, Metz didn’t miss any rhythm.
“I lead the facts, and I represent those who sent me here, and I don’t hide behind consultants or filter statements,” she said. “Responsibility means saying hard things, standing on your own ground, and not running around from the battle, even if the media grabs the pearl.”
As for the online viral video showing that seems to be a bunch of burner phones, Mace laughs at the wonder.
She quipped: "There are as many burner phones as the Wired, with reliable sources of 'burners'."
She even mocked herself in her social media claims for the AI-generated image of her tongue holding two Bernese dogs outside the Capitol and captioned it: "This is true. I have multiple Burners!"
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Mace made it clear that she believed the controversy was more smoke than the fire, and she didn't think it would disperse her legislation and work representing her area.
Mace was the first woman to graduate from a South Carolina Castle and the first woman to be elected to Congress as Charleston.