Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

US House ousts ‘crook’ congressma­n in historic vote

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Washington (AFP) - US lawmakers voted Friday to expel George Santos, the scandal- plagued politician who lied his way into Congress and has been indicted on charges of bankrollin­g his lavish lifestyle with stolen donor cash.

Earning a rebuke previously reserved for traitors and convicted criminals, the New York Republican is only the third person to join Washington's rogues gallery of ejected lawmakers since the Civil War.

He swept into the House in 2022, helping the Republican­s grab a tiny majority, but it quickly emerged that almost his entire backstory was a fabricatio­n, from his education and religion to his personal history and profession­al experience.

Santos, 35, has been indicted on dozens of federal charges of stealing from campaign donors, credit card fraud, money laundering and identity theft.

But he was ultimately doomed by a congressio­nal ethics investigat­ion that found "overwhelmi­ng evidence" of misconduct and accused him of seeking to "fraudulent­ly exploit every aspect of his House candidacy."

"You sir, are a crook," said Ohio's Max Miller, one of several members of Santos's own party to stand up on the House floor to denounce him in a debate on the expulsion on Thursday.

"My future former colleague is divorced from reality. He has manufactur­ed his entire life," said Marc Molinaro, a fellow New York Republican, while another member from the state's delegation Anthony D'Esposito called Santos a "liar."

Santos, who has denied his criminal charges, allegedly used donor money for Botox treatments and the

OnlyFans porn website, as well as luxury Italian goods and vacations to the Hamptons and Las Vegas, according to the committee.

A two-thirds majority of the House was needed to expel him, and while two previous attempts failed, the ethics report was enough to sway many of his defenders, and he was ousted in an overwhelmi­ng vote supported by more than 100 of his fellow Republican­s.

Aside from the criminal allegation­s, Santos has become notorious for a series of bizarre fabricatio­ns, including claiming to have worked for Goldman Sachs, being Jewish and having been a college volleyball star.

Beyond accusing the ethics committee of a "smear campaign," he has not publicly addressed the accusation­s in any detail.

He is the sixth House member to be expelled since Congress began deliberati­ng in 1789 and the first since 2002, when Ohio Democrat James Traficant was ousted over a bribery conviction.

Republican­s hold only a four-seat edge in the House and giving away one of those -- with Democrats likely to recapture it in a special election -- will be a considerab­le headache for a party that has struggled to pass legislatio­n.

There was doubt ahead of the vote over whether it would get the required "super-majority," with the Republican leadership coming out unanimousl­y in favor of rescuing Santos.

Dozens of Republican­s said they were reluctant to condemn a man who first deserves due process, although he is unlikely to have his day in court until next September -close to what would have been the end of his two-year term.

"Since the beginning of Congress, there's only two ways you get expelled: You get convicted of a crime, or you participat­ed in the Civil War. Neither apply to George Santos," Florida's Matt Gaetz said in a floor speech Thursday.

But Jay Jacobs, chairman of the New York Democratic Party, welcomed the closure of "a sorry chapter in the history of our county and our country," calling Santos's removal "a huge win for decency, honesty and the rule of law."

Republican­s hold only a fourseat edge in the House and giving away one of those -with Democrats likely to recapture it in a special election -- will be a considerab­le headache for a party that has struggled to pass legislatio­n

 ?? (Photo by Drew Angerer / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP) ?? WASHINGTON, DC - DECEMBER 01: Rep. George Santos (R-NY) is surrounded by journalist­s as he leaves the U.S. Capitol after his fellow members of Congress voted to expel him from the House of Representa­tives on December 01, 2023 in Washington, DC.
(Photo by Drew Angerer / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP) WASHINGTON, DC - DECEMBER 01: Rep. George Santos (R-NY) is surrounded by journalist­s as he leaves the U.S. Capitol after his fellow members of Congress voted to expel him from the House of Representa­tives on December 01, 2023 in Washington, DC.

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