Dramatic illustration of consultant Austin McCubbin resigning from Rep. Nancy Mace's gubernatorial campaign over MAGA loyalty and PAC dispute.
Image générée par IA

Top adviser quits Nancy Mace’s governor bid, citing loyalty to Trump and Paul-aligned PAC dispute

Image générée par IA
Vérifié par des faits

Austin McCubbin, a senior consultant to Rep. Nancy Mace’s South Carolina gubernatorial campaign, resigned on Monday after accusing her of turning her back on the MAGA movement and embracing a Rand Paul-aligned political network. He said an alleged discussion about steering a seven‑figure donation to a Paul-linked PAC was the final trigger, a claim Mace’s team rejects while dismissing his role on the campaign.

Austin McCubbin, a longtime Republican operative with ties to former President Donald Trump’s political operation, announced on Monday that he was leaving Rep. Nancy Mace’s (R-S.C.) campaign for South Carolina governor.

In a sharp post on X, McCubbin said Mace had “decided to turn her back on MAGA” by “hug[ging] the political cactus that is the Rand Paul + Thomas Massie wing of the Party,” according to Politico and other outlets. He framed his move as a matter of loyalty to Trump, writing that he was “100% breaking with her campaign out of loyalty to the President.”

McCubbin has been described in Mace’s own campaign materials as a senior figure on her 2026 bid. A press release on Mace’s website earlier this year announced that Trump’s former South Carolina state director was joining her gubernatorial effort as one of its lead consultants, highlighting his role in Trump’s 2024 operations in the Palmetto State and his work on Mace’s earlier campaigns.

In his resignation statement, McCubbin alleged that Mace had become too closely aligned with the “Rand Paul + Thomas Massie” faction of the GOP. He claimed that Mace told him she was directing a personal friend to send a “7‑figure check” to Protect Freedom PAC, a committee aligned with Sen. Rand Paul, and argued that she was “wittingly or unwittingly a proxy for Rand Paul’s 2028 presidential campaign.” Politico reported that it has not independently verified McCubbin’s funding allegation, and no independent outlet has confirmed the existence of such a donation.

McCubbin also accused Mace of using his connections with Trump’s circle without compensating him as promised. “My name has been used publicly, while going back on her word to pay me, to trade on my Team Trump status and to work on her behalf with the White House,” he wrote, according to Politico and other reports.

He urged Trump and his supporters to distance themselves from Mace, advising “the President, my friends in the White House, and South Carolina Trump voters: scratch her name from the list.” McCubbin contrasted Mace with Republican Gov. Henry McMaster, calling McMaster a “great governor” who has been “very loyal” to Trump and arguing that South Carolina needs a leader “cut from the same cloth, where you know their word is their bond.”

Mace entered a crowded 2026 gubernatorial field earlier this year, and Trump’s endorsement is widely seen by political observers as a powerful asset in South Carolina politics. Since launching her campaign in August, Mace and other Republican hopefuls have actively sought Trump’s backing for the state’s top job.

Mace’s campaign forcefully pushed back on McCubbin’s account in statements to Politico and other outlets. A campaign spokesperson said, “Mr. McCubbin didn’t raise a dime for the campaign or better yet, never even bothered showing up. When he demanded $10,000 a month for ‘services’ and was told no, he ran straight to X. Good luck with that.” The spokesperson also insisted that “Nancy Mace has stood with President Trump since Day ONE,” pointing to McCubbin’s own earlier praise that “Nancy Mace will be the most pro-Trump and America First Governor in the country.”

The dispute underscores ongoing tensions inside the Republican Party over Trump’s influence and the growing friction between his loyalists and libertarian‑leaning Republicans aligned with Paul and Massie. With the 2026 governor’s race approaching and Trump’s endorsement still highly prized, McCubbin’s public break with Mace highlights how intraparty divisions are shaping early maneuvering in South Carolina.

Ce que les gens disent

X users discuss Austin McCubbin's resignation from Nancy Mace's South Carolina gubernatorial campaign, accusing her of abandoning MAGA for Rand Paul and Thomas Massie alignment. Trump loyalists criticize Mace and urge no endorsement, while her team dismisses it as sour grapes over unpaid fees. Reporters highlight GOP factional tensions; sentiments include pro-Trump negativity toward Mace, neutral reporting, and commentary on party infighting.

Articles connexes

Illustration of Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene dramatically announcing her resignation from Congress at a Capitol press conference, symbolizing her break with Trump.
Image générée par IA

Marjorie Taylor Greene resigns from Congress after break with Trump

Rapporté par l'IA Image générée par IA Vérifié par des faits

U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia resigned from Congress on Friday after publicly breaking with President Trump and accusing him of abandoning his own agenda, according to an NPR interview. Her departure, as one of the most prominent MAGA-aligned lawmakers, is forcing Republicans to confront what their party will look like after Trump leaves the White House, GOP strategists say.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene has announced she will resign from Congress effective January 5, 2026, after a highly public fallout with former President Donald Trump over policy disagreements, including the release of Jeffrey Epstein files and foreign policy. Trump told ABC News that her departure was “great news for the country” and later derided her as “Marjorie ‘Traitor’ Brown” on Truth Social. The resignation came just as Trump drew notice for an unexpectedly cordial Oval Office meeting with New York City Mayor‑elect Zohran Mamdani.

Rapporté par l'IA

Marjorie Taylor Greene, la congressiste de Géorgie connue pour son soutien indéfectible à Donald Trump, a connu un changement significatif, rompant avec lui sur des questions comme les dossiers Epstein et en démissionnant du Congrès. Dans des interviews exclusives avec le journaliste du New York Times Robert Draper, Greene a révélé un tournant influencé par des valeurs chrétiennes et une désillusion face à la rhétorique de Trump. Draper a discuté de ces changements dans une récente interview NPR.

De nouveaux dépôts fédéraux et des révélations sur le financement des campagnes montrent que le réseau politique du président Donald Trump —mené par le super PAC MAGA Inc., le comité de levée de fonds conjoint Trump National Committee et le PAC de leadership Never Surrender— est entré en 2026 avec environ 375 millions de dollars en liquidités, selon une analyse de POLITICO. Ce stock, bâti en grande partie dans la seconde moitié de 2025, donne à Trump un levier financier majeur sur les élections de mi-mandat de 2026 même s'il ne peut briguer un nouveau mandat présidentiel.

Rapporté par l'IA Vérifié par des faits

Elon Musk a fait savoir sur X qu’il pourrait intensifier son soutien financier aux candidats républicains en vue des élections de mi-mandat de 2026, arguant qu’une victoire démocrate nuirait au pays. Ces remarques interviennent plusieurs mois après la rupture publique de Musk avec le président Donald Trump et alors que des signes indiquent que les deux hommes se rapprochent.

Marjorie Taylor Greene s'est positionnée comme championne des droits des femmes, critiquant le traitement des femmes par le Parti républicain et plaidant pour la publication des dossiers de Jeffrey Epstein. Cependant, son soutien aux lois restrictives sur l'avortement soulève des questions sur la sincérité de son plaidoyer. Des actions récentes mettent en lumière les tensions entre sa position personnelle et les politiques du parti.

Rapporté par l'IA

Après avoir déposé ses documents le mois dernier, l'avocat et critique virulent de Trump George Conway a officiellement lancé lundi sa candidature démocrate au 12e district congressionnel de New York, centrant sa campagne sur l'impeachment du président Trump. L'annonce, marquée par une vidéo évoquant le cinquième anniversaire de l'émeute du Capitole du 6 janvier, rejoint une primaire compétitive pour remplacer le représentant Jerrold Nadler, qui part à la retraite.

 

 

 

Ce site utilise des cookies

Nous utilisons des cookies pour l'analyse afin d'améliorer notre site. Lisez notre politique de confidentialité pour plus d'informations.
Refuser