I’ll walk you through what happened in South Carolina’s GOP governor race, why Rep. Nancy Mace fell short, how her relationship with former President Trump factored in, what her post-election messages said, and which candidates advance to the runoff. This piece stays focused on the core events and statements and keeps the politics from a Republican perspective.
The South Carolina Republican primary produced a clear verdict: Nancy Mace failed to gain traction and finished well behind the leaders. Long a provocateur in Washington, she couldn’t convert that notoriety into statewide support. For many Republicans, this race sharpened the lesson that name recognition alone won’t beat aligned party backing and a coherent message.
Mace conceded before the results were fully final and posted a lengthy on X. In that post she wrote, “Serving South Carolina has been the greatest honor of my life. Every vote I cast, every hearing I called, every fight I picked — it was always for you.” Those lines framed her exit as sincere service, not a tactical retreat.
She followed with a stronger charge about integrity that made clear where she thinks the real stakes lie: “Apparently, I chose wrong if the goal was winning an election. I’m at peace with that. Because when a candidate is OK with corruption and cover-ups — something is broken. That’s not a political opinion. That’s a moral emergency.” That language aimed to keep her brand as a fighter intact, even as voters rejected her bid.
Mace kept her tone defiant and even a little wry the next morning, posting, “Enjoying my first cup of coffee since getting my ass kicked last night.” That line landed with supporters as refreshingly human, but the quip couldn’t change the math at the ballot box.
https://x.com/NancyMace/status/2064511079074423211
Her relationship with Trump has been uneven and public for years. He backed a challenger to her in 2022 before eventually shifting support to her, and he then endorsed her 2024 reelection. This cycle, however, she never captured his blessing for governor, and Republican voters often follow his guidance when he backs someone in a contested primary.
Mace also staked out positions that made her a tougher fit with some conservative voters, notably her push for broader Epstein disclosures while thanking survivors for their courage. That sequence of moves highlighted how being outspoken on certain issues can win headlines but not always the endorsements that move primaries. Her alliance with Trump, once fragile, looked increasingly strained this year.
With Mace exiting the congressional stage, she signaled a pivot back to private life, and the campaign trail now rewards those who line up with the party’s direction. “This isn’t the end of the fight. It’s just the end of this chapter.” Those words suggested she may keep influencing the conversation even if she’s leaving elected office.
On the short-term outcome, the candidate Trump supported fared best. Lieutenant Governor Pamela Evette led the field with 28.9 percent, while Attorney General Alan Wilson followed with 26.2 percent. Evette and Wilson now prepare for a runoff scheduled for June 23, where Republican voters will decide which of the two represents the party in November.
