New York Daily News

If I didn’t lie, GOP wouldn’t have backed me, says Santos

- BY DAVE GOLDINER

Rep. George Santos claims he only said he went to college because Long Island Republican­s would never have endorsed his candidacy if they knew he only had a high school diploma.

“I would have never gotten the nomination from Nassau County GOP if I had not concluded college,” he told Newsmax. “To say that I deceived, and [ran] a campaign of deception is just not fair. That’s just a political spin.”

Santos admits concocting degrees from New York University’s business school and Baruch College, where he alsoclaime­d he was a star volleyball player.

He did not explain why he said he had a graduate degree if he was only seeking to make party bosses think he had an undergradu­ate degree.

Santos insists he has learned from his mistakes and should not be judged by what he’s alleged about everything from his education and work experience to supposed Jewish heritage.

“I’m human; I’ve made mistakes,” Santos said. “I’ve made peace with those mistakes, and I’ve come clean on those mistakes.”

In fact, Santos has confessed to only a handful of things.

He denied Brazilian prosecutor­s’ accusation­s that he stole checks and refuses to admit whether he scammed a homeless veteran out of $3,000 in donations for a dying dog.

Santos is under investigat­ion for campaign finance discrepanc­ies including claiming a $700,000 loan to his campaign that he has failed to properly explain.

The self-styled conservati­ve gay son of immigrants says all should be forgiven and forgotten, even though he has yet to suffer any consequenc­es for his actions.

“I thought we were the nation of repent and ask for forgivenes­s and move forward,” Santos said. “The problem is the media fanfare around me continues to spiral.”

Critics on both sides of the aisle have demanded Santos resign the seat he won in a midterm upset or face an expulsion vote.

But he refuses, and has become increasing­ly outspoken that he has every right to stay in Congress for his full term despite running on a record that was completely fabricated.

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy has stood by Santos.

Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) has denied Santos’ claim that she wished him well and told him to “hang in there” when they briefly crossed paths at President Biden’s State of the Union address.

“This is a lie,” said a spokeswoma­n for Sinema.

The Federal Election Commission has asked Santos to declare whether he plans to run again after he raised enough money since his election last November to require a formal declaratio­n, CNN reported.

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