- United States
- Mich.
- Letter
Nancy Mace built her entire congressional career around targeting transgender people, and voters just handed her a humiliating fifth-place finish in the South Carolina Republican gubernatorial primary. She didn't win a single county — not even her home county of Charleston. She also failed to file for reelection to her House seat, so when her term ends in January 2027, she's done. That's the return on investment for making anti-trans activism your political identity.
The lesson here is straightforward: performative cruelty doesn't translate into votes. Mace championed a federal bathroom ban covering every federal building in the country, confronted a cisgender woman in a Capitol bathroom she suspected was trans, and called protesters a slur while wandering the wrong building with a bullhorn. Voters weren't impressed. Meanwhile, Congresswoman Sarah McBride — the very person Mace targeted with Capitol bathroom restrictions — was at a Pride gala receiving a standing ovation while Mace's results rolled in.
I want you to take note of this. Legislators who make transgender people a theatrical punching bag are not building durable political careers. The politicians who won in South Carolina didn't center anti-trans activism — they just held those positions quietly. There's a clear difference between that and what Mace did. Constituents are watching, and the politics of dignity and grace, as McBride put it, are proving more resilient than the politics of targeting a small minority for sport.