Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Santos embraces notoriety instead of avoiding it

- By Nicholas Fandos This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

WASHINGTON — As he strode into a bar packed with margaritas­ipping young Republican­s here the other night, Rep. George Santos of New York looked like a man who had finally gotten what he had always wanted.

Never mind the conspicuou­s giggling or an introducer’s reference to “bipartisan condemnati­on” that he has inspired. It was a glorious spring night in the capital, and for eight minutes, Santos had something rare: an invitation to speak.

Standing behind a hightop table, he roasted Don Lemon, a former CNN anchor who was recently fired, and offered advice about running for office. “I didn’t wait my turn,” he said, adding an expletive. He added that COVID made people pick “stupid presidents,” and declared, with no apparent sense of irony, that “the truth will set you free.”

But he knew what would give his audience the biggest rise.

“I’m not going anywhere,” he declared. “You’re going to have to drag my dead, cold body out of this institutio­n.”

Four months after his whole concocted biography unraveled — one Wall Street job and collegiate volleyball championsh­ip at a time — Santos remains a pariah. Colleagues refuse to work with him, dooming his legislativ­e priorities. His local party has vowed to defeat him. And a slew of law enforcemen­t and ethics investigat­ors are combing through his life and campaign finances.

But rather than shrinking from the attention, the 34-year-old congressma­n is stepping ever more definitely toward the spotlight. Santos seems eager to test whether he can make the journey from laughingst­ock to legitimacy by aligning himself with former President Donald Trump — or at least signaling that he’s in on the joke.

In the past few weeks, he showed up outside the Manhattan courthouse where Trump was being arraigned, making himself, in a pair of oversized dark sunglasses, a brief sideshow for a mob of reporters. He has laughed gamely as a Trump impression­ist filming outside the U.S. Capitol pretended to choose him, George Santos, as his vice presidenti­al running mate.

And on Wednesday, he forced his colleagues to watch and listen as he withheld his support for a major Republican debt limit bill, finally committing his vote just after the clock ran out.

If it is an unorthodox, and perhaps still futile path, Santos has few other options. He serves on no House committees. His local Republican Party has banned him

from its events and pushed other civic organizati­ons to blackball him, too. The invitation by the Washington, D.C., Young Republican­s was his first time on the capital speaking circuit.

Santos insists this is all a good thing, leaving him more time to speak directly to constituen­ts who he says will reelect him next year, to introduce bills — 11 to date — and to draw attention to them in speeches on the House floor. But in an institutio­n that requires cooperatio­n to get anything done, he is stuck in a vacuum.

Rep. Jerrold Nadler, the dean of New York’s congressio­nal delegation, has barred him from regular, bipartisan meetings to discuss the state’s priorities. Representa­tives for New York’s senators, Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand, said he has yet to seek to work with them. And while House leaders navigating a razor-thin majority have stopped short of calling

for his expulsion, colleagues say they have made clear they will only tolerate so much.

“I have no doubt that he will be a one-term congressma­n,” said Rep. Anthony D’Esposito, a fellow New York Republican who, like Santos, flipped a Democratic­leaning suburban district on Long Island last November.

D’Esposito said he had gone out of his way to make sure his name did not appear on letters or bills with Santos and bemoaned the constant churn that seemed to follow his colleague, and overshadow his own work.

“He’s looking for life after this short stint on Capitol Hill,” D’Esposito said.

Risa Heller, a Democrat and public relations guru who advises big-name clients in unsavory situations, said it was not impossible for Santos to entertain thoughts of reelection.

“We live in a world

where literally a reality TV star became president of the United States,” she said. But then again, a future on reality TV may be more realistic, she added.

“Could he get a job on ‘Dancing With the Stars’? Probably. ‘Survivor’? ‘Big Brother 2024’? That all seems like a plausible option,” she said.

For now, Santos at least puts on the appearance of enjoying life on Capitol Hill.

“I came here to represent the people, and I don’t dislike it. I genuinely don’t,” he said in an impromptu interview before stepping into an elevator outside his office.

He was hoping to plunge down into the Capitol’s subterrane­an tunnels, but instead the elevator shot up, giving him time for several minutes of banter. He lamented being trapped with a reporter (“that, I guarantee you, I don’t want to do”), cast a look at a woman speaking loudly into a cellphone, and when a fellow passenger compliment­ed his pink silk tie, he tried a joke. It did not land.

“Look, it’s going to sound silly. It’s pop culture. It’s really bad,” the congressma­n started to explain. “Remember ‘Mean Girls,’ the movie? They would make the joke, ‘on Wednesdays, we wear pink.’”

Finally in the basement, Santos said reverently that he never talked about politics in the Capitol. He then proceeded to answer some questions about politics.

No, he said, he was not concerned about the vow by Nassau County Republican­s, who backed his 2020 and 2022 campaigns, to defeat him. Nor did he need to reintroduc­e himself to voters, though he quickly thought better of an offer to tour the district with a reporter. And rumors aside, he said he had never considered quitting.

“I live in the district. I’m a constituen­t of the district. I know the people. I eat in the district. I shop in the district. Folks know me. They call me,” he said, adding: “The reality is, trying to paint me as a boogeyman isn’t going to work.”

Later, as he was skewering Lemon as a liar, Santos again turned the lens on himself.

“It’s just so easy to point fingers, so easy to be a jackass in life,” he said. “And then, when it happens to you, you expect, you know, people to be sincere.”

He paused to rib another journalist in the room, then added: “The reality is you just have to take this life and live it.”

 ?? Shuran Huang / The New York Times ?? Rep. George Santos, R-N.Y., speaks at a Young Republican­s happy hour event in Washington on April 15. Rather than shrinking from notoriety, Santos is running toward it.
Shuran Huang / The New York Times Rep. George Santos, R-N.Y., speaks at a Young Republican­s happy hour event in Washington on April 15. Rather than shrinking from notoriety, Santos is running toward it.

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