Santos’s Lies Were Known to Some Well-Connected
Republicans
George Santos inspired no shortage of suspicion during
his 2022 campaign, including in the upper echelons of his own party, yet many
Republicans looked the other way.
Nicholas
Fandos
By Nicholas
Fandos
Jan. 13,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/01/13/nyregion/george-santos-republicans-lies.html
In late
2021, as he prepared to make a second run for a suburban New York City House
seat, George Santos gave permission for his campaign to commission a routine
background study on him.
Campaigns
frequently rely on this kind of research, known as vulnerability studies, to
identify anything problematic that an opponent might seize on. But when the
report came back on Mr. Santos, the findings by a Washington research firm were
far more startling, suggesting a pattern of deception that cut to the heart of
the image he had cultivated as a wealthy financier.
Some of Mr.
Santos’s own vendors were so alarmed after seeing the study in late November
2021 that they urged him to drop out of the race, and warned that he could risk
public humiliation by continuing. When Mr. Santos disputed key findings and
vowed to continue running, members of the campaign team quit, according to
three of the four people The New York Times spoke to with knowledge of the
study.
The
episode, which has not been previously reported, is the most explicit evidence
to date that a small circle of well-connected Republican campaign professionals
had indications far earlier than the public that Mr. Santos was spinning an
elaborate web of deceits, and that the candidate himself had been warned about
just how vulnerable those lies were to unraveling.
Fraudulent
academic degrees. Involvement in a firm accused of a Ponzi scheme. Multiple
evictions and a suspended driver’s license. All of it was in the report, which
also said that Mr. Santos, who is openly gay, had been married to a woman. The
report did not offer conclusive details, but some people briefed on the
findings wondered whether the marriage was done for immigration purposes.
It remains
unclear who else, if anyone, learned about the background study’s contents at
the time, or if the information made its way to party leaders in New York or
Washington. Mr. Santos, 34, managed to keep almost all of it from the public
until after he was elected, when an investigation by The Times independently
unearthed the problematic claims documented by researchers and others that they
missed.
After The
Times sent a detailed list of questions for this story, a lawyer for Mr.
Santos, Joe Murray, said “it would be inappropriate to respond due to ongoing
investigations.” A spokeswoman for Mr. Santos’s congressional office did not
respond to a similar request for comment.
Mr. Santos
himself has admitted to some fabrications, but insists he was merely
embellishing his qualifications. He has vowed to serve out a two-year term in
Congress. State, local and federal prosecutors are now investigating his
activity.
The
existence of the vulnerability study underscores one of the most vexing
questions still surrounding the strange saga of George Santos: How did the
gate-keeping system of American politics — Republican leaders, adversarial
Democrats and the prying media — allow a fabulist who boasted about phantom
mansions and a fake résumé get away with his con for so long?
Interviews
with more than two dozen associates, adversaries and donors, as well as
contemporaneous communications and other documents reviewed by The Times, show
that Mr. Santos inspired no shortage of suspicion during his 2022 campaign,
including in the upper echelons of his own party.
Well-connected
supporters suspected him of lying and demanded to see his résumé. Another
former campaign vendor warned a state party official about what he believed
were questionable business practices. And the head of the main House Republican
super PAC told some lawmakers and donors that he believed Mr. Santos’s story
did not add up.
But in each
case, rather than denounce Mr. Santos publicly, the Republicans looked the
other way. They neglected to get the attention of more powerful leaders or to
piece together shards of doubt about him, and allowed him to run unopposed in
the 2022 primary. Some assumed that Mr. Santos’s falsehoods were garden variety
political embellishments; others thought Democrats would do their dirty work
for them and Mr. Santos would be exposed in the heat of a general election
campaign.
But
Democrats struggled to do so. In 2020, the party incumbent, Tom Suozzi,
dismissed Mr. Santos as a nonviable threat, and conducted no opposition
research at all while cruising to victory. When Democrats did vet him two years
later, they failed to find some of the most egregious fabrications that
prompted members of Mr. Santos’s campaign team to quit.
Democrats
then labored unsuccessfully to convince the news media, which had been weakened
by years of staff cuts and consumed by higher-profile races, to dig into the
troubling leads they did unearth. Aside from The North Shore Leader — a small
weekly newspaper on Long Island, which labeled Mr. Santos “a fake” — and a few
opinion pieces in Newsday, New York’s media machine paid Mr. Santos scant
attention.
“The
reality is there’s no defense, it shouldn’t have happened,” said Gerard Kassar,
the chairman of the New York Conservative Party, a small but influential
partner to the Republican Party that backed Mr. Santos. “It would be impossible
and probably incorrect for me to say this could never happen again, but it
won’t be from me not looking again.”
Early warning signs missed
Mr. Santos
was a political neophyte when he first showed interest in running for a House
seat made up of parts of Queens and Nassau County in 2020. His only real
electoral experience ended quickly: A year earlier, he was forced to drop his
insurgent campaign for a low-level party position in Queens because he lacked
enough valid signatures to make the ballot, according to Joann Ariola, a New
York City Council member who led the Queens Republican Party at the time.
Among the
tight-knit Republican circles on Long Island, he was virtually unknown. And in
Queens, party leaders were still sour over his initial foray.
In normal
circumstances, Mr. Santos would have been shooed away. Republicans in Nassau
County, which comprises the bulk of New York’s Third Congressional District,
have long been famous for exercising tight control over who runs, grooming and
rewarding a stable of candidates like an old-school political machine.
But with
the country in lockdown in the early days of the coronavirus pandemic and the
district expected to remain under Democratic control, no one else put their
hand up to run. Mr. Santos submitted a résumé and answered a vetting
questionnaire riddled with lies, including that he had a 3.9 grade-point
average from a college he never graduated from and job credentials he did not
possess. A vetting team for the county Republican Party accepted his answers
without question.
“I guess
unfortunately we rely on the person to be truthful to us,” Joseph G. Cairo Jr.,
the Republican Party county chairman, said in an interview. This week, he
called on Mr. Santos to resign and said he would no longer be welcome in the
Nassau Republican Party.
When Mr.
Santos chose to run again two years later, local Republicans again gave him
their support. They expected that flipping the district would once again be a
stretch and, in any case, Mr. Cairo’s priority was winning state and local
offices, which control thousands of local jobs and major tax and spending
decisions. Efforts to recruit a more formidable candidate, like State Senator Jack
Martins, did not pan out.
There were
already questions swirling by that time among donors and political figures
about where exactly Mr. Santos lived and the source of the money that supported
the lavish lifestyle he boasted about.
In the
summer of 2021, one of the former advisers to Mr. Santos, who insisted on
anonymity, discovered his connections to Harbor City Capital, the Florida-based
firm accused of a Ponzi scheme, and to other suspicious business practices that
Mr. Santos had obscured. The adviser said he took the findings to a state party
official later that fall and tried to pitch the story to a newspaper, which he
said did not pursue it. The Harbor City connection was later reported in The
Daily Beast.
Around that
time, Mr. Santos began attracting the suspicion of a pair of friends and
potential donors active in New York Republican circles. Mr. Santos claimed to
one of them, Kristin Bianco, to have secured the endorsement of former President
Donald J. Trump, when he had not. That prompted her to express concerns about
Mr. Santos to plugged-in Republicans, including associates of Representative
Elise Stefanik of New York, one of Mr. Santos’s biggest early backers whose top
political aide was assisting his campaign. Later Ms. Bianco and her friend
became suspicious that they could not verify his work history.
“We’re just
so tired of being duped,” Ms. Bianco texted Mr. Santos in early 2022, after he
refused her request to produce his résumé. Mr. Santos wrote back that he found
the request “a bit invasive as it’s something very personal.”
In the
run-up to the 2022 contest, Dan Conston, a close ally of Speaker Kevin McCarthy
who leads the Congressional Leadership Fund, the main House Republican super
PAC, also confided in lawmakers, donors and other associates that he was
worried information would come out exposing Mr. Santos as a fraud, according to
two people with knowledge of the conversations who insisted on anonymity to
describe them and declined to provide more detail.
In the
spring of 2022, Mr. Santos’s race suddenly became competitive, after a state
court undid a Democratic gerrymander and adopted new congressional boundaries
friendlier to Republicans. Despite the prime pickup opportunity, the
Congressional Leadership Fund deliberately withheld support from the contest —
but never spoke about it publicly. A spokesman for Mr. Conston’s group declined
to comment on its campaign strategy or its leaders’ conversations.
If party
leaders were aware of any of the concerns about Mr. Santos, or others raised by
his former vendors, they found ways to reassure themselves.
“The
thinking was the guy went through a campaign with Suozzi, who was a pretty
tough and thorough guy,” said Peter T. King, a retired longtime Republican
congressman from Nassau County. “So anything would have come out.”
The
assumption that any damaging information about Mr. Santos would have been found
in the 2020 campaign turned out to be misguided.
Mr. Suozzi,
the popular Democratic incumbent, got a quote for the cost of an outside firm
to do opposition research on Mr. Santos. But he decided not to spend the money
— sparing Mr. Santos meaningful scrutiny in his first race.
“No one
knew George Santos, and he had less than $50,000 in campaign funds against a
popular incumbent who never even said his name,” said Kim Devlin, a Suozzi
adviser. “We didn’t feed anything to the press because why would we give him
press?”
With a more
competitive race expected in 2022, researchers at the Democratic Congressional
Campaign Committee did the first meaningful opposition research on Mr. Santos
that summer, assembling an 87-page opposition research book. It extensively
documents Mr. Santos’s past statements — including his extreme views on
abortion rights and the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.
Using
public records, the committee’s researchers also turned up some red flags in
Mr. Santos’s biography: multiple evictions; no I.R.S. registration for an
animal charity he had claimed to have created; details about his involvement
with Harbor City (Mr. Santos himself was not named in the Ponzi scheme
allegations) and more recent suspicious business dealings; as well as apparent
discrepancies in his financial disclosure forms that raised questions about the
source of hundreds of thousands of dollars he had lent his campaign.
But with
orders to produce similar research books on dozens of other candidates across
the country, the committee’s strained research team left stones unturned. At
several points, researchers explicitly flagged the need for follow-up
inquiries, such as to “determine whether Santos has a criminal record.” And
their study failed to turn up key problems that prompted Mr. Santos’s own
vendors to quit months earlier: his fabricated educational record, his marriage
to a woman and questions about his residency.
.
Opposition
research by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee suggested that
further inquiries should ascertain whether Mr. Santos had a criminal
record.Credit...Mary Altaffer/Associated Press
Mr.
Santos’s 2022 opponent, Robert Zimmerman, got hold of the research book in late
August, right after he won a competitive and costly Democratic primary. He
decided not to spend what would have likely been tens of thousands of dollars
to do more rigorous outside research.
Other
Democrats have second-guessed that decision in recent weeks, but at the time,
Mr. Zimmerman had his reasons. While presidential and Senate campaigns
typically have the financial and staff resources for exhaustive opposition
research, House campaigns tend to rely on the D.C.C.C. to conduct their
research.
Strapped
for time and cash, Mr. Zimmerman concluded that his money would be better spent
on advertising and canvassing operations. And he believed that the campaign
committee’s report as well as Mr. Santos’s far-right views on abortion and Jan.
6 — two of the year’s most prominent campaign themes — gave him powerful
campaign fodder.
“We knew a
lot about him did not add up; we were very conscious of that,” Mr. Zimmerman
said in an interview. “But we didn’t have the resources as a campaign to do the
kind of digging that had to be done.”
Mr.
Zimmerman said his campaign tried to prod reporters at local and national news
outlets with leads about Mr. Santos, but had little luck. The candidate
himself, a public relations executive, did not hold news conferences or use
paid advertising to draw attention to known discrepancies in his opponent’s
record.
“The
response we got back pretty universally was they just didn’t have the
personnel, the time or the money to do it,” Mr. Zimmerman said, referring to
the publications the campaign contacted. “One person said to me, there are 60
to 80 crazy people running, we can’t investigate them all.”
One outlet
stood out, The North Shore Leader in Long Island, run by a Republican lawyer
and former House candidate, Grant Lally. The paper published a pair of articles
casting doubt on Mr. Santos’s claims that he owned extravagant cars and homes,
and labeling him a “fabulist — a fake,” though it did not have other specifics
that would later come out about his falsified résumé or his past.
None of the
bigger outlets, including The Times, followed up with extensive stories
examining his real address or his campaign’s questionable spending, focusing
their coverage instead on Mr. Santos’s extreme policy views and the historic
nature of a race between two openly gay candidates.
What did top Republicans know?
In the
aftermath of Mr. Santos’s exposure, Democrats have said that their researchers
would likely not have turned up much of the information uncovered by The Times
and other media outlets after the election. Private institutions like schools
and businesses are more inclined to share educational and employment records
with reporters than with political parties, they say.
But the
opposition research firm Mr. Santos hired in the fall of 2021 — his campaign
reported spending $16,600 on Capital Research Group LLC — seems to have had
relatively little trouble turning up some of that same information.
People
working for his campaign had grown accustomed to Mr. Santos’s braggadocio and
outlandish claims. But when they approached him about conducting a
vulnerability study, the objective was more routine: producing a record of his
past statements and other public information that would be useful later when
his opponents started crafting attacks.
Mr. Santos
quickly signed off, but as the research dragged on, he asked to cancel the
contract with the firm. When the results came back, it was clear why.
Researchers
found no evidence that Mr. Santos had earned degrees at Baruch College and New
York University, as he had claimed. They turned up records showing his
involvement with the company accused of a Ponzi scheme — a relationship he had
played down. They found eviction records, business records and a suspended
Florida driver’s license, which together raised questions about whether he was
a legal New York resident and as rich as he claimed to be.
The report
also said that Mr. Santos, who was openly gay and appeared to be living with a
man at the time, had been married to a woman. The study missed other
fabrications that The Times later uncovered, including false claims that he
worked at Citibank and Goldman Sachs. Nor did it turn up records of fraud
charges in Brazil years earlier.
The Times
has not seen the vulnerability study, but it was described in recent days by
four people with knowledge of the report who were granted anonymity because it
remains confidential.
The people
working for Mr. Santos convened an emergency conference call to discuss the
results on Dec. 1, 2021. They presented him with a choice: bow out of the race
with dignity, or stay in and risk letting the Democrats turn up the same
information and use it to destroy his political and personal future.
After
promising to produce diplomas that would prove his degrees (he ultimately did
not), Mr. Santos said he would think it over. When he came back a few days
later, he said he had spoken with other advisers and was convinced the findings
were not as bad as they were being portrayed. He was staying in the race. Most
of his team quit.
What top
Republicans were told of Mr. Santos’s issues is more difficult to chart. Mr.
Santos required those working for his campaign to sign nondisclosure
agreements, limiting the spread of the vulnerability report. But one person who
was briefed on its contents said that questions about Mr. Santos’s background
were discussed well beyond campaign vendors. The National Republican
Congressional Committee, which closely monitors House candidates and backed Mr.
Santos, sometimes requests such reports as a condition of its support.
A spokesman
for the group declined to comment for this article, but pointed to an earlier
statement denying it had previous knowledge that Mr. Santos’s record was
largely fabricated. The N.R.C.C. typically does not conduct its own independent
vulnerability studies on candidates.
Mr.
McCarthy, who ultimately endorsed Mr. Santos and helped his campaign, has said
relatively little about the fabrications, and has refused calls to try to oust
him from the House as the speaker seeks to maintain an exceedingly narrow
majority in Washington. This week, Mr. McCarthy played down Mr. Santos’s lies,
comparing them to other politicians who have embellished parts of their résumés
and implying he would not undo the will of voters who elected him.
Spokesmen
for Mr. McCarthy did not respond to repeated requests for comment for this
story, and a spokesman for Ms. Stefanik, the highest-ranking New York House
Republican, declined to comment. Allies of Mr. McCarthy maintain that they did
not know about the baldest fabrications and misrepresentations, like those
turned up by Republican researchers in late 2021, but only had more general
concerns about his honesty.
Despite the
financial resources he helped marshal to the race, Mr. McCarthy had good
personal reason to be wary of Mr. Santos. Earlier in 2021, an aide to the
candidate was caught impersonating Mr. McCarthy’s chief of staff while
soliciting campaign contributions.
By the
spring of 2022, Mr. Santos was in need of a new team of consultants. With help
from Ms. Stefanik’s top political aide, he chose a new consulting firm and
shared the vulnerability study.
The new
crop of vendors, led by Big Dog Strategies, never spoke to their predecessors,
though, and did not know why they had left the campaign. After Mr. Santos again
insisted he had graduated from college, and addressed other red flags raised in
the report, the new team accepted his explanations and began plotting a
campaign. They would use issues — not the candidate’s biography — to win the
race.
Reporting
was contributed by Alexandra Berzon, Grace Ashford and Maggie Haberman.
Nicholas
Fandos is a reporter on the Metro desk covering New York State politics, with a
focus on money, lobbying and political influence. He was previously a
congressional correspondent in Washington. @npfandos





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