OPINION
THE
EDITORIAL BOARD
Republican Leaders’ Cynical Failure to Hold
George Santos Accountable
May 19,
2023, 3:34 p.m. ET
By The
Editorial Board
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/19/opinion/george-santos-expulsion.html
The
editorial board is a group of opinion journalists whose views are informed by
expertise, research, debate and certain longstanding values. It is separate
from the newsroom.
George
Santos is far from the first member of Congress to be indicted while in office.
Both chambers and both parties have endured their share of scandals. In 2005,
for instance, F.BI. agents discovered $90,000 hidden in the freezer of
Representative William Jefferson, who was under investigation for bribery. He
refused to step down, wound up losing his seat in the 2008 election, and was
later sentenced to 13 years in prison. James Traficant was expelled from
Congress in 2002 after being convicted of bribery and racketeering. Bob Ney
resigned in 2006 because of his involvement in a federal bribery scandal.
But in one
way, Mr. Santos is different from other members of Congress who have
demonstrated moral failures, ethical failures, failures of judgment and blatant
corruption and lawbreaking in office. What he did was to deceive the very
voters who brought him to office in the first place, undermining the most basic
level of trust between an electorate and a representative. These misdeeds erode
the faith in the institution of Congress and the electoral system through which
American democracy functions.
For that
reason, House Republican leaders should have acted immediately to protect that
system by allowing a vote to expel Mr. Santos and joining Democrats in removing
him from office. Instead — not wanting to lose Mr. Santos’s crucial vote —
Speaker Kevin McCarthy pushed a measure to refer the matter to the House Ethics
Committee, notorious for its glacial pace, and the House voted predictably
along party lines on Wednesday afternoon to follow that guidance.
If the
House doesn’t reverse that vote under public pressure, it’s incumbent on the
Ethics Committee to conduct a timely investigation and recommend expulsion to
the full House, where a two-thirds vote will be required to send Mr. Santos
back to Long Island.
Mr. Santos
was arrested and arraigned in federal court last week on 13 criminal counts
linked primarily to his 2022 House campaign. Mr. McCarthy and other members of
the Republican leadership effectively shrugged, indicating that they would let
the legal process “play itself out,” as the conference’s chair, Elise Stefanik,
put it.
In addition
to expulsion, the Republican leaders have several official disciplinary
measures they could pursue, such as a formal reprimand or censure, but so far,
they have done little more than express concern. Mr. McCarthy has several tough
legislative fights looming, including negotiations over the federal budget to
avoid a government default, and Mr. Santos’s removal might imperil the G.O.P.’s
slim majority. In effect, Mr. Santos’s bad faith has made him indispensable.
His
constituents believed he held certain qualifications and values, only to learn
after Election Day that they had been deceived. Now they have no recourse until
the next election.
The
question, then, is whether House Republican leaders and other members are
willing to risk their credibility for a con man, someone whose entire way of
life — his origin story, résumé, livelihood — is based on a never-ending series
of lies. Of course they should not. They should have demonstrated to the
American people that there is a minimum ethical standard for Congress and used
the power of expulsion to enforce it. They should have explained to voters that
their commitment to democracy and public trust goes beyond their party’s
political goals.
At least
some Republican lawmakers recognize what is at stake and are speaking out.
Senator Mitt Romney of Utah reiterated his view that Mr. Santos should do the
honorable thing and step aside, saying, “He should have resigned a long time
ago. He is an embarrassment to our party. He is an embarrassment to the United
States Congress.”
Similarly,
Anthony D’Esposito and Mike Lawler, both representing districts in New York,
are among several House Republicans advocating his resignation. Representative
Tony Gonzales of Texas has gone a step further, calling for Mr. Santos’s
expulsion and a special election to replace him. “The people of New York’s 3rd
district deserve a voice in Congress,” he wrote on Twitter.
Mr.
Gonzales gets at the heart of the matter. Mr. Santos has shown contempt for his
constituents and for the electoral process. Mr. McCarthy and the other
Republican House leaders owe Americans more.
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The
editorial board is a group of opinion journalists whose views are informed by
expertise, research, debate and certain longstanding values. It is
separate from the newsroom.


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