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Home » Law In Travel » Crazy: Rep. Nancy Mace Sues American Airlines After Being Called Out For Her Vulgar Conduct
American AirlinesLaw In Travel

Crazy: Rep. Nancy Mace Sues American Airlines After Being Called Out For Her Vulgar Conduct

Matthew Klint Posted onNovember 7, 2025November 7, 2025 6 Comments

a woman in a pink dress speaking into microphones

U.S. Representative Nancy Mace (R – SC) is threatening to sue American Airlines and Charleston Airport for defamation, claiming the carrier falsified records to discredit her gubernatorial campaign. Rather than a valiant effort to defend her character, this is a pathetic effort by Mace to cover up her vile conduct, which is unbecoming of an elected official.

Rep. Nancy Mace Is Suing American Airlines And Charleston Airport

A quick, plain recap of what happened: at Charleston International Airport (CHS), an incident report filed by airport police and witnessed by TSA and airline staff describes Representative Nancy Mace, who is running to be the next Governor of South Carolina, loudly berating officers and using profanity after an escort mix-up. Local reports say officers were looking for a different vehicle description and did not initially find the correct car, and that the interaction escalated from there. Mace’s office has pushed back, posting surveillance footage and accusing airport and airline employees of falsifying reports. In a Trump-like tweet, she has announced she will pursue litigation for defamation and retained outside counsel.

SUING FOR DEFAMATION!!

I've retained an attorney to take swift and severe legal action against American Airlines and the Charleston Airport following allegations they falsified incident report(s) to defame me.

Thank you for your attention to this matter!… pic.twitter.com/MKTCRxqY3Q

— Nancy Mace (@NancyMace) November 5, 2025

As her attorney explained:

“We believe Congresswoman Nancy Mace has been subjected to a calculated and coordinated effort to malign her character through deliberately falsified documentation. No American, let alone a sitting member of Congress, should be subjected to institutional misconduct and defamation of this nature. We intend to hold both American Airlines and Charleston International Airport fully accountable for their actions.”

Local leaders quickly rallied behind airport staff: more than 50 Lowcountry officials (mayors, city leaders and a bipartisan group of state lawmakers) signed a public letter supporting the airport workforce and defending TSA and aviation police from what they called unfair attacks. Senator Tim Scott publicly criticized Mace’s conduct as unbecoming of a member of Congress after Mace said Scott would never have been treated that way:

U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham (R – SC) also backed the airport workers over Mace.

I concur with @SenatorTimScott’s statement when it comes to the men and women who provide security at the Charleston International Airport. I have had similar personal experiences and have had nothing but positive, respectful engagements with the police officers and TSA agents…

— Lindsey Graham (@LindseyGrahamSC) November 5, 2025

Graham’s post prompted a rebuke (and gay joke) from Mace:

Interesting. Lindsey Graham all of a sudden wants to talk about women. 🧐

HOLD THE LINE

— Nancy Mace (@NancyMace) November 5, 2025

Does She Have A Case?

Suing for defamation is a standard tool for anyone who believes their reputation was wrongly damaged. But two realities make this particular lawsuit hard to win and easier to weaponize politically.

First, the documents at the center of this dispute are incident reports and contemporaneous statements from public-safety employees. Those reports are typically treated as factual accounts recorded by officers and airline employees who were on the scene. To prevail in a defamation suit over an incident report, Mace’s legal team will need to prove the reports were not just incorrect but knowingly false or recklessly prepared, a high bar, especially when multiple independent witnesses and a written police report exist.

Second, Mace has already made the political choice to litigate. That choice transforms a personnel dispute into a public spectacle. In an era where surveillance footage and social media posts reach voters instantly, suing the airport and an airline will prolong the story, make the underlying footage and reports a permanent part of the public record, and hand opponents daily fodder. That may help her base now, but from a legal and reputational perspective, it is a risky calculation.

Mace Unfit For Leadership…

Let me be blunt: this is a weak and tone-deaf defense for a sitting member of Congress and a candidate for governor.

We have a public official who, according to multiple reports and a police incident log, loudly berated airport police and TSA agents while invoking a senior senator by name and using profanity to describe sworn officers as “incompetent.” How far-fetched is it that everyone by Mace is lying?

Those are not momentary lapses in judgment. They are conduct choices and reveal much deeper character flaws. The optics are awful. For a member of Congress and for someone running statewide, that conduct is not merely a private failing, it is a public one. Voters expect basic decorum from elected officials. They also expect accountability when the person who represents them treats public servants with contempt.

Beyond optics, there is an equity problem here. TSA officers and airport police are frontline public servants who enforce safety rules under difficult conditions. After a long string of national security worries and, in many places, staffing strains, painting them as liars while publicly using profanity at them is a serious professional affront. That explains the unusually broad, bipartisan sign-on letter of support for airport staff. It is not just political theater; it is community leaders defending the integrity of the people who keep travel running.

A Political Miscalculation For Mace?

A few practical notes for anyone watching the race or the courtroom drama that may follow.

The surveillance footage Mace released will be parsed mercilessly.Without sound (based on body language), it appears to corroborate the incident report.

The local show of support for airport workers matters. When mayors, county leaders and both parties line up behind employees who filed the report, it weakens a narrative that this is a simple “they lied about me” case. Those signatures are a political and reputational counterweight to a single elected official’s legal threat.

Finally, for Mace personally, this is a judgment misstep. If you are running for governor, you do not court scrutiny. In that light, the decision to publicly attack rank-and-file airport staff, then escalate to a lawsuit, looks like an overreach that will cost more political capital than it buys. As View From The Wing notes, whatever you think of Congresswoman Mace, she is getting very bad advice.

Then again, President Trump has defied all political conventions, so you almost wonder who the crazy one is…

CONCLUSION

Everyone has the right to seek legal redress if they believe they were defamed. But when a member of Congress publicly berates TSA and police, uses vulgar language while invoking a senior senator’s name, and then threatens litigation that could punish public-safety employees for doing their jobs, the optics are harsh and the legal path is steep. This does not look like a principled case. It looks like the wrong fight over the wrong facts, and voters will (hopefully) remember who escalated it.

Nancy Mace, like everyone else, can use the court system to prove wrongdoing. But the instant, ugly theater of her airport outburst and the subsequent legal threat reveal a larger character question that neither footage nor lawsuits can fix. The people who run airports and screen passengers deserve respect. Elected officials who represent them owe nothing less.


image: mace.house.gov

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About Author

Matthew Klint

Matthew is an avid traveler who calls Los Angeles home. Each year he travels more than 200,000 miles by air and has visited more than 135 countries. Working both in the aviation industry and as a travel consultant, Matthew has been featured in major media outlets around the world and uses his Live and Let's Fly blog to share the latest news in the airline industry, commentary on frequent flyer programs, and detailed reports of his worldwide travel.

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6 Comments

  1. Nancy Cray Reply
    November 7, 2025 at 12:25 pm

    Writing as a longtime Republican and a lifelong SCCD1 resident, Mace is b@sh!t crazy and I do not understand why people I know vote for her. Politics aside, and jokes aside, I’ve seen her up close and in person and I think she needs professional help. She can suddenly shift from superficially polite to rabid suddenly, often without provocation.

    If she weren’t causing problems for other people so often (I know some of the people who have cycled through her staff) she’d be deserving of pity. But this lady isn’t serving her district, the GOP or the country well.

  2. Dave Edwards Reply
    November 7, 2025 at 12:27 pm

    Can’t defend her and really don’t like her after she bragged about how much sex her and her “friend” have but….shes not unfit for office based on this action.

    Let the voters of South Carolina decide if they think she’s fit for office or not.

    But you are correct our TSA agents and others at airports deserve respect, until they do something you or your wife disagree with, then you publicly blast them here. No defense of Nancy but your record on them isn’t squeaky clean either.

    • Matthew Klint Reply
      November 7, 2025 at 1:26 pm

      I don’t curse them out or blame them for what they did not do wrong.

      Big difference, Dave.

      Taking out her anger on the TSA for her staff’s lack of communication shows what a petty woman she is.

      Calling out the swine at DHS who treat people like scum is a very different matter.

  3. stogieguy7 Reply
    November 7, 2025 at 12:37 pm

    I can fix her.

    • might have teeth tho Reply
      November 7, 2025 at 1:19 pm

      lol go off king

  4. Tuck Frump Reply
    November 7, 2025 at 12:41 pm

    Unfortunately, this is not a *bug* of the modern-day GOP, rather it’s a *feature*. When cornered, lash out like a rabid animal to deflect and deny any and all accountability. Gee, I wonder where she learned it…..

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