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First on Fox: Republican firebrand Nancy Mace launches bid for South Carolina governor

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EXCLUSIVE – Rep. Nancy Mace, the South Carolina Republican with a large national profile, on Monday declared her candidacy for Palmetto State governor.

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«I’m running to put South Carolina first,» Mace, a three-term House member who represents a coastal congressional district in the state’s Lowcountry, said in a statement shared first with Fox News Digital.

Mace, as she launched her campaign, argued that «we can continue doing the things we’ve always done,» as she took aim at what she called «weak leadership» in the state.

«Or we can chart a new course – one filled with common sense and bold policies to hold the line for South Carolina,» she emphasized.

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And Mace went up on a newly launched campaign website with a 10-point agenda that she called «a clear, conservative, common sense roadmap to rebuild South Carolina from the ground up:»

Mace is following her announcement with a campaign policy event Monday morning in Charleston at the Citadel, which is South Carolina’s public military college and her alma mater.

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Mace enters a crowded GOP primary field in the 2026 race to succeed term-limited Republican Gov. Henry McMaster, who is the Palmetto State’s longest-serving governor.

South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson, Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette and state Sen. Josh Kimbrell are all seeking the GOP nomination in the reliably red state. They were joined a week ago by Republican Rep. Ralph Norman, who declared his candidacy.

SOUTH CAROLINA ATTORNEY GENERAL ALAN WILSON LAUNCHES BID FOR GOVERNOR

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Mace, in a recent interview with Fox News Digital ahead of her launch, said that «we’re starting out front, in the lead, and it’s a two-man race» between her and Wilson.

And she pledged that «I will fight to the finish, and I will take out South Carolina’s Attorney General, because he’s turned a blind eye on women and on children and on the state for a lot of reasons. He might force me to do this.»

South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson, seen speaking at the South Carolina State House on Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024, is running a Republican campaign for governor in 2026. (Tracy Glantz/The State/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

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Mace, in a bombshell speech on the U.S. House floor in February, alleged that Wilson ignored evidence of sexual assault against her and other women. In her hour-long speech, Mace accused four men, including her ex-fiance, of sexual crimes and said she was among the victims.

Wilson vehemently denied Mace’s accusations, saying at the time «that allegation was never made to me — no one in my office.»

Wilson, in a statement to Fox News a week ago, argued that «Nancy Mace is a liar who will do anything to get attention to distract from her liberal voting record. I’ve served our country and dedicated my civilian career to protecting children.»

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«Her attacks are, again, categorically false and are just a distraction from her liberal agenda,» he added. «South Carolina families need a Governor who will fight for our values, not someone who will compromise them for political gain and social media clicks.»

And Wilson’s campaign highlighted that every sheriff in Mace’s congressional district has endorsed his campaign for governor.

Gov. Henry McMaster speaks to reporters with South Carolina Comptroller General Brian Gaines standing behind him

Republican Gov. Henry McMaster, South Carolina’s longest-serving governor, is term-limited and cannot seek re-election in 2026. (Joshua Boucher/The State/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

Mace, who dropped out of high school at age 17, and worked at a Waffle House before eventually becoming the first female graduate of the Citadel’s Corps of Cadets, won election to Congress in 2020. She defeated Democratic Rep. Joe Cunningham, to become the state’s first Republican woman elected to the House.

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Mace, who worked on President Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign, strongly criticized his actions surrounding the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol, when Trump supporters attempted to upend congressional certification of now-former President Joe Biden’s victory in the 2020 election.

NANCY MACE ARGUES RUSSIAGATE A ‘POLITICAL HIT JOB’

Trump backed a primary challenger against Mace when she was up for re-election in 2022, but she successfully won re-nomination and re-election.

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Mace later came to Trump’s defense after the then-former president was indicted for mishandling classified documents. And she endorsed Trump in the 2024 Republican presidential primaries, as he topped a large field of rivals, including former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley.

Trump’s grip over the GOP, thanks to his 2024 victory to win back the White House, is stronger than ever, and his endorsements in GOP nomination races are extremely influential.

Asked if she could land the president’s endorsement, Mace told Fox News Digital, «I’ll be working very hard if I get in to earn his support.»

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And in her campaign launch video, Mace uses a clip of Trump calling her a «fighter» in a speech, and adding that «when she sets her sight on something, she’s tough.»

Mace has leaned hard into cultural issues in recent years, including leading the charge to prevent Democratic Rep. Sarah McBride of Delaware, the first openly transgender member of Congress, from using the women’s restrooms in the House.

Nancy Mace is a Republican who is in her third term representing a congressional district in South Carolina's Lowcountry, along the Atlantic coast.

Republican Rep. Nancy Mace of South Carolina, seen in the U.S. Capitol on Thursday, April 10, 2025, on Monday announced her candidacy for governor in the 2026 race to succeed term-limited GOP Gov. Henry McMaster. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

And Mace, in her campaign launch, vowed to defend what she called «biological reality and stop the radical gender agenda.»

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«No child is born in the wrong body. No boy belongs in a girls’ locker room. And no teenage girl should lose her scholarship to a boy in a skirt,» she argued. «I’ve already started shutting down this woke ideology at South Carolina schools, and will do significantly more to gut this abusive ideology and ship it out of state.»

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El ejército de Israel comienza a rebelarse contra la ocupación total de Gaza

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El ejército de Israel tendrá que «ejecutar» las decisiones políticas sobre la guerra en la Franja de Gaza, señaló este miércoles el ministro de Defensa, en momentos en que empiezan a surgir discrepancias en sus filas ante la perspectiva de una ocupación total del territorio palestino.

En los últimos días, la prensa israelí ha revelado las reservas e incluso la oposición del jefe del Estado Mayor, el general Eyal Zamir, a la decisión del gobierno de Benjamin Netanyahu de ampliar las operaciones del ejército en Gaza para vencer «totalmente» a Hamas y traer de vuelta a los rehenes que están todavía en manos del grupo extremista desde el brutal ataque terrorista del 7 de octubre de 2023.

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La cadena de televisión pública Kan 11 informó el miércoles que el general Zamir había advertido el día anterior, durante una reunión, que la ocupación total de Gaza supondría una «trampa».

Los medios israelíes, que citan funcionarios que pidieron el anonimato, afirman que el gobierno planea una nueva escalada de las operaciones en el territorio palestino, incluso en zonas donde podrían estar retenidos los rehenes y áreas muy pobladas.

Soldados israelíes, en la frontera con la Franja de Gaza, en el sur de Israel. Foto: AP

La orden del ministro de Defensa

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«Es el derecho y el deber del jefe del Estado Mayor expresar su posición en los foros apropiados», comentó el miércoles el ministro de Defensa, Israel Katz.


«Pero después de que se tomen decisiones por parte del nivel político, el ejército las ejecutará con determinación y profesionalismo (…) hasta que se alcancen los objetivos de la guerra», subrayó Katz en X.

Según el diario Maariv, el general Zamir advirtió el martes que «intensificar los combates podría acarrear la muerte de los rehenes que siguen en vida» y también habría reiterado «su oposición a una decisión de conquistar completamente la Franja de Gaza», que Israel ya ocupó entre 1967 y 2005.

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El jefe de la oposición, Yair Lapid, consideró que «la dirección que emprende el gobierno conducirá a la muerte de todos los rehenes por hambre, golpes y tortura».

Un tanque del ejército de Israel, cerca de la frontera con Gaza, este miércoles. Foto: REUTERS  Un tanque del ejército de Israel, cerca de la frontera con Gaza, este miércoles. Foto: REUTERS

Benjamin Netanyahu reúne a su gabinete de seguridad


Netanyahu reunirá el jueves a su gabinete de seguridad para tomar las decisiones finales sobre la nueva fase de la guerra, indicó la prensa israelí.


«Es necesario derrotar totalmente al enemigo en Gaza, liberar a todos nuestros rehenes y asegurarse de que Gaza ya no constituya una amenaza para Israel», afirmó Netanyahu el martes.

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En guerra contra Hamas desde la masacre del movimiento ultraislámico palestino en su territorio en octubre de 2023, el gobierno israelí enfrenta una creciente presión para encontrar una salida al conflicto.

Netanyahu está sometido a una doble presión: en Israel, por la situación de 49 rehenes capturados el 7 de octubre, de los que 27 habrían muerto según el ejército; y en el resto del mundo, por el sufrimiento de los más de dos millones de palestinos que viven hacinados en la Franja, arrasada y amenazada por una «hambruna generalizada», según la ONU.

En los últimos días, la presión aumentó aún más a raíz de los videos difundidos por Hamas y Yihad Islámica en los que aparecen dos rehenes israelíes, Evaytar David y Rom Braslavski, muy debilitados y demacrados.

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Más muertos en un centro de distribución de comida

En la asediada Franja de Gaza, donde entra muy poca ayuda humanitaria, la Defensa Civil reportó este miércoles la muerte de 20 personas en el accidente de un camión de víveres que se volcó sobre la multitud por la noche.


«El camión se volcó cuando cientos de civiles aguardaban ayuda alimentaria en la zona de Nuseirat, en el centro de la Franja de Gaza», informó a AFP el portavoz de la Defensa Civil, Mahmud Bassal.

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Camiones con ayuda humanitaria esperan para entrar a la Franja de Gaza por el cruce de Rafah, en la frontera con Egipto. Foto: AP  Camiones con ayuda humanitaria esperan para entrar a la Franja de Gaza por el cruce de Rafah, en la frontera con Egipto. Foto: AP

Por su parte, Hamas denunció que «a pesar de la reciente autorización limitada de algunos camiones de ayuda, el ocupante (Israel) obstaculiza deliberadamente el paso seguro y la distribución de esta ayuda».


Esto «obliga a los conductores a tomar rutas abarrotadas de civiles hambrientos», añadió.


Al ser preguntado por AFP, un militar israelí afirmó que el ejército no estuvo involucrado en el incidente.

Caroline Willemen, una responsable de Médicos Sin Fronteras, denunció la «crisis del hambre» en Gaza e insistió en que la situación es «devastadora».

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«Seguimos viendo a pacientes a los que les disparan, o aplastados en sitios de reparto de ayuda», agregó en redes sociales.


Israel había impuesto en Gaza un bloqueo total el 2 de marzo y lo levantó parcialmente en mayo, autorizando únicamente la entrada de cantidades muy limitadas, consideradas insuficientes por la ONU.


El ataque del 7 de octubre de 2023 provocó la muerte, en Israel, de 1.219 personas, civiles en su mayoría, según un recuento basado en cifras oficiales.

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La ofensiva que Israel lanzó en respuesta e Gaza mató a al menos 61.158 personas, también mayoritariamente civiles, según cifras del Ministerio de Salud del territorio, gobernado por Hamas desde 2007. La ONU considera fiables estos datos.

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‘Should have been prepared’: GOP senators fight for unified message on Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’

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Now that the Senate has fled Washington until after Labor Day, Republicans finally have a chance to sell President Donald Trump’s «big, beautiful bill» to their constituents, but some fear that Democrats already have an advantage in the messaging war.

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Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., said that Republicans could «absolutely» do better in selling the colossal bill to combat Democrats’ «lies.»  

«Well, we should have been prepared right off the bat and talked about, ‘No, we’re not talking about reforming Medicaid designed for [women, children and the elderly]. We’re looking at how we can save and preserve it and repair the damage done by the Obamacare addition to it,’» he told Fox News Digital. «We should have been talking about that, but we didn’t.»

SENATE GOP READY TO GO NUCLEAR AFTER SCHUMER’S ‘POLITICAL EXTORTION’ OF NOMINEES

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President Donald Trump in the East Room of the White House on July 30, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)

Since Trump signed the bill into law, and throughout the entire process to get it to his desk, Democrats have largely been unified in their attacks against the bill, rebranding it as Republicans’ «big, ugly betrayal,» and targeting cuts to Medicaid, food assistance and a litany of other policies.

«It’s a very unpopular bill, so if I were them, I would probably go out and start trying to spin,» Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., told Fox News Digital.

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Messaging against the bill has become routine in Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer’s floor speeches, where he often targets the cuts to Medicaid touted by the GOP as reforms to a broken system.

«The more Americans learn about the Republicans’ bill, the more they are realizing that Donald Trump and Republicans sold them a raw deal,» the New York Democrat said in a floor speech last week. «The Republicans’ ‘big, ugly betrayal’ is one of the most devastating bills for Americans’ healthcare that we’ve ever seen.»

TRUMP TELLS SCHUMER TO ‘GO TO HELL’ OVER SENATE NOMINEE DEAL FUNDING DEMANDS AFTER NEGOTIATIONS COLLAPSE

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Schumer at the Capitol

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., turns to an aide during a news conference where he commented on Elon Musk’s criticism of President Donald Trump’s spending and tax bill, at the Capitol in Washington on June 3, 2025.  (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Polling of the bill’s favorability among Americans is also working against Republicans. A Fox News poll conducted in June after the House GOP passed the legislation found that 59% of respondents opposed the bill.

Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kan., charged that «90% of the media is lying» about the bill, and countered that Republicans were actually increasing Medicaid spending faster than the rate of inflation «to the tune of $200 billion a year when it’s all said.»

«This is not the first message like this that we’ve struggled to get the truth through,» he told Fox News Digital.

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«Republicans need to lean into it,» he continued. «We worked really hard, and we’re going to save and preserve Medicaid for those who need it the most. And we need to be sharing that.»

TAX CUTS, WORK REQUIREMENTS AND ASYLUM FEES: HERE’S WHAT’S INSIDE THE SENATE’S VERSION OF TRUMP’S BILL

Sen. Tommy Tuberville

Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-AL) arrives for a Senate Republican Caucus luncheon at the U.S. Capitol in Washington on April 2, 2025. (Nathan Posner/Anadolu via Getty Images)

Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., contended that Republicans shouldn’t be shy about the work they put into the bill.

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Hawley, shortly after the bill passed early last month, held an event in his home state pushing the bill. He, alongside former Rep. Cori Bush, D-Mo., lauded the bill’s inclusion of his Radiation Exposure Compensation Act, which renewed and expanded compensation funding for people exposed to nuclear waste.

When asked if Republicans had gotten off to a slow start on selling the bill, he said that too much time had been devoted to talking «about Medicaid, for my own taste.»

«It’s less of that,» he said. «Talk about the tax cuts in this bill for working people, you know. I mean, that’s what people want. I mean, I was asked when I went home. I was asked immediately by people, ‘When are those no taxes on tips? When does that start?’ So, I mean, people are tracking it, but they’re tracking what’s for them.»

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And Sen. Tommy Tubberville, R-Ala., charged that Democrats had «zero credibility» when it came to bashing the GOP for cuts and reforms.

«We got a lot of time,» he told Fox News Digital. «There will be a lot of water underneath the bridge. You won’t hear about the ‘big, beautiful bill’ here in another year because there’s going to be a couple more big, beautiful bills.»

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NATO member scrambles jets after Russian drone attack near border, as Witkoff meets with Putin

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Romania was forced to scramble F-16 jets after Russia carried out a strike just half a mile from the NATO nation’s territory.

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The country’s Ministry of National Defense (MApN) confirmed in a post on X that Russia carried out a drone attack near its border.

«On the night of August 5-6, the Russian forces launched a massive drone attack on the civilian infrastructure in the Ismail area, Ukraine, in the vicinity of the border with Romania,» Romania’s defense ministry wrote in a post on X.

«The radar systems of the MApN detected air targets in Ukrainian space, close to Tulcea County. At 1:10a.m., the population in the north of the county was warned via RO-Alert,» the ministry added. RO-Alert is Romania’s official emergency warning system.

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Flames and plumes of smoke in Ukraine seen from Romania as Russia continues the war.  (East2West news)

NATO JETS SCRAMBLED AMID RUSSIA’S LARGEST DRONE ATTACK ON UKRAINE

The defense ministry stated that two F-16 fighter jets took off «to monitor the national airspace,» but no «unauthorized intrusions» were detected. The ministry said it would carry out checks in the area and keep NATO allies updated in real time.

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The drones reportedly struck oil and gas pipelines at the Orlivka plant in Odesa, Ukraine. Bright orange flames and plumes of smoke were visible across the Danube River.

Nearby Lithuania has also suffered from Russia’s war on Ukraine. Drones from Putin ally Belarus crossed into its territory, according to Lithuanian Minister of Foreign Affairs Kęstutis Budrys, who said he spoke with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte.

«These repeated incidents represent an alarming sign of the spillover of Russia’s aggression against [Ukraine] onto [NATO territory],» Budrys said of the incident. «We cannot compromise the security of our country and citizens, nor the integrity of NATO airspace. We must remain vigilant, as the threat is real and growing.»

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Russian President Vladimir Putin and U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff shake hands

Russian President Vladimir Putin welcomes U.S. President Donald Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff during a meeting in Moscow, Russia Aug. 6, 2025.  (Sputnik/Gavriil Grigorov/Pool via Reuters)

RUSSIA LAUNCHED ITS LARGEST AERIAL ATTACK OF THE WAR, UKRAINE SAYS

This attack could signal that Russian President Vladimir Putin is not moving closer to reaching a ceasefire deal, despite President Donald Trump’s Friday deadline. It’s unclear whether Special Envoy Steve Witkoff’s visit will push the Russian leader to move toward peace. However, if Moscow fails to make a deal by Friday, the U.S. will impose sanctions on Russia and potentially secondary tariffs.

Trump is reportedly putting pressure on Witkoff’s visit. One person close to the administration told the Financial Times that «if Witkoff comes back empty-handed, with absolutely nothing, Trump is going to go ballistic.»

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President Donald Trump sits with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte

President Donald Trump meets with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte at the NATO summit in The Hague, Netherlands, June 25, 2025.  (REUTERS/Brian Snyder)

Witkoff reportedly spent about three hours at the Kremlin and, according to Russian investment envoy Kirill Dmitriev, the «dialogue will prevail,» Reuters reported.

TRUMP CONFIRMS NUCLEAR SUBMARINES «IN THE REGION» AHEAD OF WITKOFF’S RUSSIA VISIT

Before setting the deadline, Trump reportedly spoke with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy about securing a deal that would end the brutal war more than three years after Russia’s invasion. Zelenskyy later confirmed the conversation took place, saying that the «key focus» was ending the war.

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«Today, we coordinated our positions – Ukraine and the United States. We exchanged assessments of the situation: The Russians have intensified the brutality of their attacks. President Trump is fully informed about Russian strikes on Kyiv and other cities and communities,» Zelenskyy wrote on X.

East2West News contributed to this report.

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