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ABC News

Nancy Mace defends her support for Trump after he was found liable for sexual assault

George Stephanopoulos pressed Mace, a self-identified rape survivor, on her continued support for Trump after a jury found him liable for battery and defamation in the E. Jean Carroll case. Stephanopoulos repeatedly described the verdict as 'rape', a characterization Trump later sued ABC over, settling for a $15 million library contribution. The interview made national headlines as a painful public confrontation of Mace's stated values against her political alignment.

Nancy Mace defends her support for Trump after he was found liable for sexual assault, ABC News
Nancy Mace defends her support for Trump after he was found liable for sexual assault, ABC News

"It was not a criminal court case, No. 1. No. 2, I live with shame. And you're asking me a question about my political choices trying to shame me as a rape victim.", Nancy Mace, to ABC News' George Stephanopoulos

In a nationally televised interview, ABC News anchor George Stephanopoulos put Mace in a position few politicians had faced directly: he asked a self-described rape survivor to justify her support for a man a jury had found liable for sexual abuse and defamation. Stephanopoulos framed the jury's verdict plainly:

"Donald Trump has been found liable for rape by a jury. Donald Trump has been found liable for defaming the victim of that rape by a jury."

Mace pushed back on the characterization and pivoted to her voters, saying she had followed their lead on moving past the controversies surrounding Trump:

"I listened to my voters in South Carolina, and they've moved beyond Jan. 6."

The exchange became one of the most-watched clips of the 2024 cycle, a sitting congresswoman who had publicly spoken about surviving sexual assault defending a man a civil jury had found liable for the same category of conduct. The interview generated sustained national commentary and featured prominently in coverage of Mace's subsequent political difficulties.

The interview carried a legal aftershock: Trump sued ABC News over Stephanopoulos' repeated use of the word "rape" to describe the Carroll verdict. The suit settled in December 2024 for a $15 million contribution to Trump's presidential library.

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