House Ethics Committee opens investigation into Rep. Nancy Mace over reimbursement practices
The House Ethics Committee announced Monday that it has extended its review of Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.) following a referral from the Office of Congressional Conduct alleging she engaged in "improper reimbursement practices" that may have violated House rules.
The OCC's board found "substantial reason to believe" that Mace's reimbursement requests exceeded her actual D.C. property expenses during several months in 2023 and 2024, The Hill reported. The alleged excess totaled $9,485.46.
Mace's office responded by saying the congresswoman is not taking the ethics complaint "seriously," and fired back with a pointed comparison to how Congress has handled far graver accusations against other members.
The Numbers in Question
The Washington Post had previously reported that Mace, who co-owns a Capitol Hill townhouse she purchased in 2021 with her then-fiancé Patrick Bryant, expensed a total of $27,817 in 2023 for lodging. That averaged more than $2,300 a month, with some months exceeding $3,000.
Mace pushed back on that reporting at the time, claiming she had incurred more than $100,000 in D.C. lodging expenses and received roughly $29,000 after taxes in reimbursements. "Do the math," she said.
The Ethics Committee itself cautioned against reading too much into the review. Its chairman and ranking member wrote in their statement:
"The Committee notes that the mere fact of conducting further review of a referral, and any mandatory disclosure of such further review, does not itself indicate that any violation has occurred, or reflect any judgment on behalf of the Committee."
Standard boilerplate. But standard boilerplate exists for a reason: ethics referrals are not findings. They are questions, not answers.
Mace Comes Out Swinging
Whatever the merits of the reimbursement allegations, Mace clearly views them through a different lens entirely. She attributed the original reporting to her ex-fiancé Bryant, whom she has accused of predatory behavior. In her earlier statement, she said Bryant "is terrified he might go to jail" and called the system "broken" for allowing "a predator" to "viciously go after his victims."
Her office's Monday response escalated further, drawing a direct comparison to the allegations surrounding Rep. Tony Gonzales (R-Texas) and a staffer who later killed herself. Mace's office quoted Speaker Johnson's own words about that situation:
"As Speaker Johnson famously said last week when a Member sexually harassed his staffer until she lit herself on fire and died: 'It's too early for anybody to prejudge any of that.'"
The message was unmistakable: same standard, same bar.
On X, Mace went even further, writing that members of Congress "can sexually harass their employees until they light themselves on fire and die" and "allegedly do arms deals AND allegedly beat women" without consequence. But "a conservative woman, calling out those who do wrong? Well, let's hang her."
The Selective Scrutiny Problem
Mace's rhetoric is combative, but the underlying question she raises deserves honest examination. Congress has a long and inglorious history of applying its ethics machinery unevenly. The OCC, which Mace's office called "partisan" and accused of "retaliating against women," has faced skepticism from multiple corners about its consistency and standards.
A $9,485 reimbursement discrepancy is not nothing. If Mace overclaimed housing expenses, that should be addressed. But the ferocity of institutional attention matters in context. When allegations of sexual misconduct, abuse of power, and worse circulate about sitting members and the standard response is "let the process play out," it raises fair questions about which processes get fast-tracked and which get slow-walked.
Mace has never been one to go quietly. Whether that instinct serves her well here remains to be seen. But she's right about one thing: the rules should apply the same way to everyone, or they don't really apply at all.



