
Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC) vowed on Monday to publicly identify members of Congress whom the House Ethics Committee had investigated for alleged sexual harassment or misconduct after having obtained all documents she had requested via a congressional subpoena.
“The results of my subpoena of Congress’s sexual harassment slush fund are in. Nine members. One thousand pages,” Mace wrote Monday in a social media post on X to her more than 760,000 followers.
“All records prior to 2004 were destroyed – which tells you everything you need to know about how long this has been buried. We are reviewing every page. We will name all nine.”
Mace, herself a survivor of sexual assault, has faced pushback from some of her Republican colleagues over her efforts. She’s also broken with her GOP colleagues in demanding that former Attorney General Pam Bondi testify before Congress over her botched handling of the Justice Department’s release of Jeffrey Epstein-related files.
Last month, Mace announced progress in her effort to force the release of files that detailed the House Ethics Committee's past investigations into members of Congress over sexual harassment claims. In her announcement, she called Congress members who engaged in such activity “predators.”
“We will release the full 1,000 pages – once we confirm that personally identifiable information of victims and witnesses has been properly redacted,” Mace continued. “Accountability is not a threat. It is a promise.”
The results of my subpoena of Congress’s sexual harassment slush fund are in.
Nine members. One thousand pages.
All records prior to 2004 were destroyed - which tells you everything you need to know about how long this has been buried.
We are reviewing every page. We will name… pic.twitter.com/S4QizDJuFt
— Rep. Nancy Mace (@RepNancyMace) May 4, 2026





