George Santos, the scandal-plagued US congressman and admitted fabricator who has been indicted on federal charges of stealing from donors, was expected to face a vote Wednesday on expelling him from the House of Representatives.
Fellow Republicans in his state of New York have been keen to distance themselves from the lawmaker, who has acknowledged lying to voters by making up large chunks of his life story including college credentials and work experience, and then refusing to resign when called out for the misrepresentation.
Santos pleaded not guilty last week to the latest federal indictments against him, including stealing donors’ identities and running up fraudulent charges on their credit cards.
He is also accused of wire fraud and money laundering, as well as collecting unemployment benefits that he was not entitled to during the coronavirus pandemic, before his election to Congress.
Should the freshman lawmaker be expelled it would mark the first time since 2002 that the House has booted one of its own. Then, Ohio Democrat James Traficant was ousted over 10 charges including bribery.
The House Ethics Committee launched an investigation of Santos in February and has yet to release any determination or findings. The panel’s leaders said Tuesday the committee will announce its “next course of action” in the matter by November 17.
But congressman Anthony D’Esposito of New York has sought a quicker path, filing a bill last week that, if passed by a two-thirds majority of House members present, would kick Santos out of the chamber.
A House scheduling update for Wednesday shows that the expulsion bill will receive a floor debate followed by a full House vote.
“We must remove this conman from the People’s House,” D’Esposito, whose congressional district borders that of Santos, said in a post on X, the former Twitter.
Despite Santos’s established record as a fabulist, it remained unclear whether the expulsion effort could earn support from two thirds of the chamber.
Republicans currently hold a razor-thin majority of four seats in the 435-seat House. Losing a member would make passing legislation even more difficult for Republicans and their new speaker of the House, Mike Johnson.
Republicans in New York, large swathes of which lean Democratic, are seen as vulnerable in the 2024 election and several of them — as well as his constituents — have called on Santos to resign.
He has refused.