CONGRESS
Democrats spar over Santos strategy as GOP punts
on bid to expel him
During a closed-door meeting hours before the
party-line defeat of Rep. Robert Garcia’s measure expelling the New York
Republican, the party diverged on strategy.
By OLIVIA
BEAVERS and NICHOLAS WU
05/17/2023
01:25 PM EDT
Updated:
05/17/2023 07:09 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2023/05/17/house-dems-mccarthy-santos-00097426
House
Democrats wrangled internally on Wednesday over whether to try to stop Speaker
Kevin McCarthy from punting on a bid to expel George Santos from Congress.
The
tensions surfaced during a closed-door Democratic caucus meeting, hours before
Republicans prevailed in a vote to quash Rep. Robert Garcia’s (D-Calif.)
privileged resolution ejecting the indicted Santos from his seat. Some
Democrats argued in favor of of blocking McCarthy’s push to refer the Garcia
plan to the House Ethics panel — which, had it succeeded, would have forced a
full House vote on booting the scandal-plagued New York Republican — according
to two people familiar with the situation.
After all,
those Democrats reasoned, the whole point of Garcia’s push is squeezing the
House GOP to go on the record protecting Santos, their fabrication-happy
first-term member who faces 13 counts of federal charges.
“I think we
should find out where members stand on this indicted member of Congress,” said
Rep. Yvette Clarke (D-N.Y.), among those who pushed the caucus to pursue a full
House vote to expel Santos. “I think we need to definitely make sure that our
concerns are registered through a vote.”
But other
House Democrats took a different view, according to both people who addressed
the closed-door meeting on condition of anonymity. Some more senior Democrats,
whom both people interviewed declined to name, argued that forcing an expulsion
vote could set a bad precedent — echoing McCarthy’s position.
The
Democratic split over how to handle the Santos vote illustrates the enduring
generational divide within a caucus that’s growing younger and more progressive
after decades of leadership by an octogenarian trio. Just because House
Democrats have new leaders this Congress, however, doesn’t mean their senior
members’ counsel doesn’t hold weight.
Ultimately,
House Republicans stayed unified as they voted to refer the Garcia measure to
Ethics. The final tally was 220-202, with seven Democrats voting present. While
five of the Democratic present votes came from members of the Ethics panel, two
others joined them: swing-seat Reps. Marie Gluesenkamp Pérez (D-Wash.) and
Chrissy Houlahan (D-Pa.).
Santos told
reporters after the vote that he approved of the referral to the Ethics panel.
“This is
the appropriate way to do this. I think that this was the right decision for
all of us and I look forward to continuing to defend myself,” he said. Shortly
after, he cut off his remarks when progressive Reps. Jamaal Bowman (D-N.Y.) and
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) started to heckle him, shouting “resign!”
The
spectacle continued, with Bowman getting into an argument with Rep. Marjorie
Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) before Ocasio-Cortez intervened and pulled Bowman away.
Republicans
who serve on the ethics panel did not join their Democratic counterparts in
voting present, with some arguing their vote was a referral and not a judgment.
Some of
Santos’ fiercest GOP critics publicly endorsed McCarthy’s plan to move the
matter to the famously slow-moving ethics committee, which is already
conducting an investigation into Santos’ campaign-trail fabrications and
finances.
“Moving
this expulsion resolution to the ethics committee, in an expedited fashion,
will get George Santos out of Congress as quickly as possible. And I think that
that is necessary,” Rep. Marc Molinaro (R-N.Y.) said in an interview. “I expect
that the Ethics Committee will expedite the hearing.”
First-term
Rep. Brandon Williams (R-N.Y.), who has called on Santos to resign, sounded a
similar note in a statement Wednesday.
To many
Democrats, though, sending the matter to the Ethics panel was the effective equivalent
of tabling the issue altogether. And they would only need a simple majority of
the House to vote down McCarthy’s efforts to refer the bill to committee — a
much more plausible ask — while ousting Santos would require a two-thirds
majority.
Democratic
Caucus Chair Rep. Pete Aguilar (D-Calif.) made the case to his California
colleagues in a closed-door meeting Wednesday for voting against sending the
measure to the ethics panel. It would be the “easy way out” for the speaker, he
said in an interview after the meeting.
“He doesn’t
have the votes to table,” Aguilar said of McCarthy. “And so he’s trying to send
this to Ethics to give his members who have called for George Santos to resign
… an opportunity to vote with the team.”
McCarthy
and GOP leaders acted quickly to help dissuade their handful of anti-Santos New
York Republicans from any temptation to vote for Garcia’s expulsion plan.
During a private Tuesday meeting first reported by POLITICO, McCarthy laid out
the process to the Empire State’s GOP delegation, arguing that the ethics panel
referral makes more sense than tabling the expulsion measure or allowing it to
come to the floor for a vote.
Yet, even after
McCarthy defeated House Democrats’ push to expel Santos, his conference’s
problematic prevaricator is poised to cause more headaches soon.
The speaker
told reporters Wednesday that the ethics panel could “come back faster than a
court case could” with recommended Santos sanctions.
“I would
like to refer this to Ethics. I’ll have a conversation with Hakeem. I would
like the ethics committee to move rapidly on this,” McCarthy said.
Sarah
Ferris and Meredith Lee Hill contributed to this report.
FILED UNDER:
CONGRESS, YVETTE CLARKE, KEVIN MCCARTHY, HOUSE DEMOCRATS,
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