Rep. Nancy Mace, a U.S. Congresswoman representing South Carolina’s 1st district since 2021, recently addressed several legislative and justice-related issues on her social media account.
On February 5, 2026, Mace announced the introduction of a new bill aimed at federal hiring practices in cybersecurity. She wrote, “Our Cybersecurity Hiring Modernization Act ends mandatory degree requirements for federal cyber jobs and opens the door to qualified cybersecurity professionals who lack a college degree. Our government needs the best cybersecurity professionals protecting America, hired for https://t.co/BsLu9wI2R9”.
Later that day, Mace expressed support for proposed voting legislation. In her post dated February 5, 2026, she stated, “The SAVE Act has our full support. ONLY American citizens being eligible to vote in our elections is DEMOCRACY. The only people who seem to have a problem with requiring voter ID are our colleagues on the Left who rely on non-citizens to keep their seats.”
In another message posted on February 5, 2026, Mace commented on issues within the justice system: “EVERY. SINGLE. NAME. If the justice system spent even a fraction of the time it does protecting predators, on protecting victims, we would not be having this problem.”
Mace’s recent statements reflect ongoing debates in Congress regarding election integrity and reforms to federal employment standards in technical fields such as cybersecurity.
Serving in Congress since replacing Joe Cunningham in 2021 and previously serving in the South Carolina House of Representatives from 2018 to 2020, Mace has been an advocate for various legislative changes during her tenure ([source](https://bioguide.congress.gov/search/bio/M001207)). Born in Fort Bragg in 1977 and currently residing in Charleston, she is also known as one of The Citadel’s early female graduates ([source](https://www.citadel.edu/about/distinguished-alumni/nancy-mace/)).

