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Politician’s profanity-laced spectacle at airport

A US politician blew up in a profane “spectacle” in front of staff after police were late to escort her through a major airport.

Politician's profanity-laced spectacle at airport

A US politician let a “minor miscommunication” blow up into a profane “spectacle” when she repeatedly cussed at police for being late to escort her through a South Carolina airport, an internal investigation has found.

Republican Nancy Mace, 47, had expected Charleston Airport Police to walk with her to her gate promptly after being dropped off on the morning of October 30.

US Secret Service head brutally roasted by politician Nancy Mace

But, she flew into a rage when a supervisor who misidentified her car delayed the congresswoman’s meet-up with law enforcement, according to the 10-page report.

The South Carolina gubernatorial hopeful arrived at an unexpected location in a “grey/silver BMW” rather than a “white” one, as the supervisor – who the report said “read the email quickly and pass[ed] on incorrect information unintentionally” – had stated.

Republican of Sith Carolina, Nancy Mace. Picture: Jemal Countess/Getty Images for Congressional Integrity Project
Republican of Sith Carolina, Nancy Mace. Picture: Jemal Countess/Getty Images for Congressional Integrity Project

Use of the encrypted app Signal – which “[n]o other protectee” uses for communicating with officers — and complications due to the “high personnel turnover” rate in Mace’s office also “exacerbated” the situation, added the November 12 report by Charleston Airport Police Chief James A. Woods.

“While it is clear that we hold a certain level of responsibility in miscommunicating the colour of Congresswoman Mace’s vehicle, it’s also equally clear that her continued failure to follow established procedures at the checkpoint is what turned a minor miscommunication over the colour of a vehicle into the spectacle that this issue has become for our employees and airport workers,” it concluded.

Republican Nancy Mace turned a ‘minor miscommunication’ into a profane ‘spectacle’ when she repeatedly cussed at cops for belatedly escorting her through a South Carolina airport. Picture: FOIA via Charleston Regional Aviation Authority
Republican Nancy Mace turned a ‘minor miscommunication’ into a profane ‘spectacle’ when she repeatedly cussed at cops for belatedly escorting her through a South Carolina airport. Picture: FOIA via Charleston Regional Aviation Authority

Despite the delay, the South Carolina politician was held up for no more than six minutes at a Transportation Security Administration checkpoint, during which time she tore into a supervisory TSA officer and later police who helped her to the gate, snapping at one point that she was “sick of your s**t”.

“[W]hen the Congresswoman arrived at the checkpoint, she was on her phone and telling someone on the other end of the line that she ‘shouldn’t be waiting,’ and that ‘this is always happening,’” relayed the security officer.

Mace also snarled on the phone that she would not be so inconvenienced if she was a senator, confirming an early account of the incident that quoted her as saying, “[GOP Sen.] Tim Scott [R-SC] would not be f*****g treated this way.”

One TSA officer said Mace’s tone was ‘very nasty, very rude’ and her behaviour was ‘very unbecoming if she’s representing us’ as a member of Congress. Picture: X/NancyMace
One TSA officer said Mace’s tone was ‘very nasty, very rude’ and her behaviour was ‘very unbecoming if she’s representing us’ as a member of Congress. Picture: X/NancyMace

“You need to go and get whoever, because I’m not going through your TSA line,” she said in another testy exchange with the supervisory officer.

When airport police arrived, Mace turned her rage on them as they accompanied her to her flight.

“I’m sick of your s**t, I’m tired of having to wait. I should not have to wait. You guys are always [f*****g] late, this is [f******g] ridiculous,” she fumed.

“She was still in the checkpoint area when the police officers arrived,” reported another supervisory TSA officer who “could hear the Congresswoman call them ‘f*****g idiots’ and ‘f*****g incompetent,’ while stating that she’s a ‘f*****g representative’” and “that this sort of behavior was ‘very unbecoming if she’s representing us … in a political aspect.’”

That officer also described Mace’s tone as “very nasty [and] very rude,” while the report described other cops and security personnel as appearing “visibly upset” and feeling “downtrodden”.

None of the TSA officers were receiving paychecks at the time due to the federal government shutdown.

Mace had expected airport police to walk with her from the curb of Charleston International Airport to her gate on the morning of Oct. 30. Picture: X/NancyMace
Mace had expected airport police to walk with her from the curb of Charleston International Airport to her gate on the morning of Oct. 30. Picture: X/NancyMace

The congresswoman’s staff has asked for a security escort based on “multiple threats to her safety,” the report noted, but there have been “countless” times when officers were called to the curb to bring Mace to the boarding area, only to find that she “was not where she said that she would be.”

Mace’s office has also “never provided” information about specific threats to her safety when asked by airport police.

Mace, speaks during the third day of the 2024 Republican National Convention at the Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Picture: Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP
Mace, speaks during the third day of the 2024 Republican National Convention at the Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Picture: Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP

“We appreciate this full exoneration and look forward to remaining fully focused on the issues that actually matter to South Carolinians: affordability and law and order,” a spokesperson for Mace said in a statement after the report was released Monday.

In a November 4 statement after the incident was first reported, Scott criticised Mace’s conduct, saying: “Those who know me know that I do not use profanity – in public or private.”

“It is never acceptable to berate police officers, airport staff, and TSA agents who are simply doing their jobs, nor is it becoming of a Member of Congress to use such vulgar language when dealing with constituents,” the South Carolina senator also said.

Mace is currently polling at 18 per cent, one percentage point behind the GOP primary frontrunner, Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette, according to the RealClearPolitics polling average.

Those surveys were all conducted before the October 30 incident. A more recent poll of GOP primary voters conducted Nov. 24-26 found Mace had fallen to 10.5 per cent support, with state Attorney-General Alan Wilson at 22.2 per cent, Evette at 15.7 per cent and Rep. Ralph Norman (R-SC) at 12 per cent.

This article originally appeared on the New York Post and was reproduced with permission

Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/travel/travel-updates/incidents/politicians-profanitylaced-spectacle-at-airport/news-story/6545d5c9f1e2da151e41e41554f0fdff