Rep. Nancy Mace on Monday evening escalated her campaign against Rep. Cory Mills, unveiling a formal resolution to expel him from the House over allegations ranging from sexual misconduct to financial and ethical abuses.
According to The Post Millennial, Maces resolution marks a sharp rebuke not only of Mills but of House leadership in both parties, which she suggests has been more interested in protecting an incumbent than in defending women or enforcing basic standards of conduct.
In a blistering statement, Mace wrote, "The swamp has protected Cory Mills for far too long and we are done letting it slide. We tried to censure him and strip him from his committee assignments. Both parties blocked it, but we are not backing down. The evidence against Mills is overwhelming: beating women and telling them to lie about it, cyberstalking women, lying about his military service, and profiting off his seat. Any Member who votes to keep him here is voting to protect a woman beater and a fraud. He needs to be expelled IMMEDIATELY."
The resolution, first obtained by Fox News, accuses Mills of campaign finance violations, sexual misconduct, misrepresenting his military service, and improper involvement in federal contracts while serving in Congress. Mace had earlier sought to censure Mills and remove him from his two committee assignments, but that effort was overwhelmingly rejected in November when more than 300 lawmakers voted instead to refer the matter to the House Ethics Committee.
The Ethics Committee announced on Monday that its investigation is still underway, underscoring that the case is far from resolved even as political pressure mounts. The panel is examining six categories of alleged misconduct, including that Mills "failed to properly disclose required information on statements required to be filed with the House" and that he "violated campaign finance laws and regulations in connection with his 2022 and 2024 election campaigns."
Investigators are also probing whether Mills "improperly solicited and/or received gifts, including in connection with privately sponsored officially-connected travel" and whether he "received special favors by virtue of his position." Further, the committee is reviewing claims that he "engaged in misconduct with respect to allegations of sexual misconduct and/or dating violence" and "misused congressional resources or status."
Outside the Capitol, Mills faces serious legal and personal controversies that raise additional questions about his fitness for office. A Florida judge issued a restraining order against him in October for "protection against dating violence," after an ex-girlfriend accused him of harassment and blackmail using nude images and videos, and police opened an investigation in February 2025 into an alleged assault of a 27-year-old woman at his Washington, DC property, per Newsweek.
Maces move comes as Congress grapples with a broader pattern of scandal and moral decay that has eroded public trust and highlighted the failures of internal policing. The resolution follows the recent resignations of Eric Swalwell, who stepped down amid multiple allegations of sexual misconduct including rape, and Tony Gonzales, who left office after reports surfaced of an affair with an aide who later killed herself by setting herself on fire, reinforcing conservative concerns that a political class shielded by the swamp has abandoned the standards it demands of everyone else.
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