Rep. Nancy Mace (RS.C.) and Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-Texas) had a heated exchange during a House hearing on Tuesday, with Mace asking Crockett if she wanted to “take him outside.” It reached its climax.
The war of words occurred during a debate on civil rights and transgender rights, with Crockett calling for the reestablishment of a subcommittee on civil rights and criticizing Mace’s rhetoric regarding transgender people.
“Right now, you can see someone’s campaign finances are in real trouble. So (Mace) is going to keep saying, ‘Trans, trans, trans, trans,’ so people feel threatened.” “Listen, child,” said Mr. Crockett.
“I’m not a child. Please don’t call me a child. I’m not a child,” Mace interjected, asking Committee Chairman James Comer (R-Ky.) for orders. I urged him to do so, but it ended in failure.
“If you want to take it outside, you can,” Mace told Crockett.
State Representative Maxwell Frost attempted to defend Crockett, claiming Mace had incited violence against Crockett.
After discussion, Comer ruled that Mace’s comments were not a call for violence, and said Mace may have been inviting Crockett to come out for a “coffee or beer.” .
Spokespeople for Mace and Crockett did not immediately respond to requests for comment Tuesday night.
However, the two attacked X to protect themselves.
Mace posted about the incident more than a dozen times, admitting he was “angry” at Crockett, but saying his calls to come out didn’t mean he wanted to fight.
“To be clear, I wanted to stop the discussion and have a more constructive conversation, not a fight. At no point did I intend to harm anyone.” she wrote in one post.
Crockett said he was threatened on “X” and called Mace an “attention-seeking loser.”
“Last I checked, blackmailing members in committee rooms does not reduce the price of eggs at all,” she wrote.
Mace has become known in recent months for his actions against transgender people. Following the election of Rep. Sarah McBride, D-Del Med, the first openly transgender member of Congress. , Mace introduced measures to ban transgender women from women’s restrooms in Parliament House. Mace later said the resolution was “definitely” targeted at McBride, and that she has since traveled to her district to talk to state Republicans about the bill.
The House Oversight Committee room where Tuesday’s exchange took place was also the site of a meeting last year that was disrupted by personal insults. In May, a hearing collapsed when Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Georgia, said in response to a question from Crockett, “I think the fake eyelashes are ruining what you’re reading.” did.
When Comer ruled that Greene’s words did not violate the committee’s rules, Crockett asked: If someone on this committee started talking about someone’s bleached blond, misshapen butch body, that wouldn’t involve personality, would it? ”