Mace uses prohibited software in House office

The South Carolinian chairs a subcommittee on CyberSecurity on the Oversight Committee, and recently passed the MACE Act, which unusually she named after herself — yet uses the work management site Monday.com to handle a number of tasks in her office.

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“We used it for everything and Nancy ran it,” a former Mace staffer tells The Spectator. All legislative and media planning work went through this platform, sources say; we’re also told by former Mace staff that her office has used it to conduct constituent services that could leave personal information of her constituents potentially vulnerable.

Everything from her constituents’ phone numbers, emails, and other personal information is on the software — expressly prohibited by the House. The company itself is a publicly traded company based in Israel, raising questions about relying on a foreign entity to do business.

[Probably not a great idea, probably not the end of the world either. Mace is trying to push back on this as a payback over her role in ousting McCarthy, which it may very well be. That doesn’t answer the question why the Cybersecurity chair is using prohibited platforms for her official work. — Ed]

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