After months of ridicule and humiliation, Rep. George Santos’ troubles reached an even more serious point last week. A week ago today, the New York Republican was indicted by the Justice Department and charged with a variety of crimes, including wire fraud, money laundering, and theft of public funds. Two days later, the GOP congressman, as part of an agreement with Brazilian prosecutors, confessed to theft.
Evidently, this week won’t be especially easy for Santos, either. NBC News reported:
Democratic Rep. Robert Garcia introduced a resolution Tuesday to expel indicted Republican Rep. George Santos from Congress. The resolution is privileged, meaning the Republican-controlled House must bring it up in the next two days.
The California congressman championing the measure told reporters that the purpose of the resolution is to “put Republicans on the record” in response to Santos’ latest legal troubles.
The good news for the freshman New York lawmaker is that the threshold for expulsion is quite high: While most House votes are majority rule, Garcia’s resolution will need a two-thirds majority to pass. That’s a high hurdle: If every House Democrat supports the measure, they’ll need roughly a third of the House Republican conference to go along in order to kick Santos out.
By most estimates, those votes probably won’t be there, but the fact that the resolution is coming to the floor anyway will put GOP lawmakers in the uncomfortable position of either voting to expel a scandal-plagued member of their own party, or voting to keep around a proven liar and an accused felon who last week confessed to theft.
Those aren’t great choices.
For their part, House Republican leaders — who need Santos’ vote and don’t seem especially eager to get rid of him — have not and will not endorse the expulsion resolution. That said, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy told reporters that he’d still prefer to let the House Ethics Committee deal with this.
“I would like…
Read the full article here