By Staff Writer
In a move that has sent shock waves through the halls of power in Washington, Congresswoman Nancy Mace (R-SC) is tearing the veil off the darkest secrets of the legislative branch. Mace has spearheaded a crusade to expose a taxpayer funded slush fund used to settle sexual harassment and misconduct claims against members of Congress a system she argues has functioned for years not to protect victims, but to insulate predators from accountability.
357 members of Congress voted to keep it hidden. We’re leading the charge to release them despite their opposition.
2007: Rodney Alexander ($15,000)
2009: Office of Carolyn McCarthy (2 cases resulting in 1 settlement) ($8,000)
2010: Eric Massa I ($85,000)
2010: Eric Massa II ($20,000)
2010: Eric Massa III ($10,000)
2010: John Conyers I ($50,000)
2014: Blake Farenthold ($84,000)
2014: John Conyers (Severance pay $27,111.75)
2017: Patrick Meehan (2 cases resulting in 1 settlement) (Severance pay $39,250)
Nancy Mace named 9 members of Congress who accessed the Hush Fund, totaling $338K dollars, but the slush fund was said to be at $18M dollars, what happened to the other $17.6M. We need to know if the person who started this fund is still in Congress
The establishment’s reaction was as predictable as it was damning. When Mace forced a floor vote to compel the House Ethics Committee to release all records related to sexual misconduct investigations, the response from both sides of the aisle was a unified wall of silence.
By an overwhelming 357–65 vote, members of Congress acted to bury the resolution, effectively killing the effort to bring transparency to these taxpayer subsidized settlements. Mace did not mince words, calling out every member who voted against the measure as an accessory to a systemic cover up.
"They were not protecting victims," Mace stated in a recent Newsweek op-ed. "They were protecting themselves and their colleagues. They protected the predators."
The controversy centers on the Office of Congressional Workplace Rights, which has long operated as the black box for congressional misconduct. For years, taxpayer dollars have been funneled into settlements to resolve claims ranging from unwanted advances to sexual assault.
While Mace has highlighted specific settlements involving high profile names including individuals who have previously faced scrutiny over their conduct the math simply doesn’t add up. With reports suggesting the total capacity of such funds reaching upwards of $18 million, the identified payouts of roughly $338,000 represent only a fraction of the total.
Conservative reformers are now demanding to know, where is the missing $17.6 million?
Who authorized the creation of this fund, and are they still wielding power in Washington today?
Why were records prior to 2004 systematically destroyed?
Mace’s efforts follow the disturbing revelations involving Rep. Tony Gonzales, whose explicit text messages to a staffer who later died by suicide brought the issue of workplace harassment back to the forefront. While the Ethics Committee has launched a formal investigation into Gonzales, Mace and other transparency advocates remain skeptical that any meaningful report will ever see the light of day.
History shows that the Ethics Committee often uses the pretext of protecting victims to keep investigative findings locked away indefinitely. Mace’s resolution, which explicitly included provisions to protect and redact the identities of victims and witnesses, directly challenged this narrative, forcing members to admit that they weren't protecting the vulnerable they were shielding the corrupt.
As the legislative session continues, the demand for a full audit of these settlements is growing. For the American taxpayer, the question is no longer just who did it, but who allowed this culture of impunity to thrive for so long?
Congresswoman Mace has made her position clear, the era of the secret settlement is coming to an end and she is determined to drag the truth into the light, regardless of the political cost to the establishment.
The time for backroom deals and taxpayer funded silence is over. We must demand the immediate and full release of the entire congressional misconduct report. The American people have a fundamental right to know exactly which elected officials have weaponized their positions of power to exploit staff, only to be shielded by an opaque, closed door settlement process. Every single dollar of the millions in unaccounted for funds must be tracked, and the individuals responsible for creating and sustaining this culture of impunity must be dragged into the light. Only by making every record, settlement, and investigative finding public with full transparency for those who abused their office can we dismantle this corrupt system and ensure that members of Congress are finally held to the same standards as the constituents they were sent to represent.
No comments:
Post a Comment