NEWS
ANALYSIS
With Santos Ouster, a Chaotic Congress Makes
History Again
A Republican-led House known for dysfunction managed
to purge a serial fabulist from its ranks, but the expulsion threatened to make
it even harder for the G.O.P. to govern.
Luke
Broadwater
By Luke
Broadwater
Reporting
from the Capitol
Dec. 1,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/01/us/politics/santos-house-republicans-expulsion.html
Moments
after House members cast a historic vote to expel Representative George Santos
of New York, Speaker Mike Johnson banged the gavel with a grim look on his
face.
“In light
of the expulsion of the gentleman from New York, Mr. Santos, the whole number
of the House is now 434,” he announced gravely to an uncommonly silent House
chamber, looking down with a faint grimace.
It made
official what had been apparent in recent days — that many of his fellow
Republicans had been willing to defy his wish to keep Mr. Santos, a serial
fabulist, in Congress, and that Mr. Johnson and his party were now facing
ever-more brutal political math. Their slim four-vote majority has dwindled to
just three.
That will
make governing more difficult for Republicans, who have already had immense
trouble corralling their fractious members to steer legislation through the
closely divided House. A pair of government funding deadlines early next year
will test Mr. Johnson’s ability to maneuver with even less wiggle room in his
party than before to navigate a pending shutdown and keep his job.
It was also
a rare feat to address an obvious wrong by a chamber that has distinguished
itself this year mostly by paralysis and dysfunction in the face of crisis.
The ouster
of Mr. Santos came in a Congress marked by extraordinary levels of chaos. The
disarray was in full effect almost from the first day in January, when
Representative Kevin McCarthy, Republican of California, engaged in the
longest-ever fight to win the speakership. It continued in October with his
becoming the first speaker in history to be removed from the job. And it has
featured multiple Republican mutinies on the floor that have paralyzed
legislative business and put the party’s divides on vivid display.
With the
118th Congress on pace to pass the fewest bills of any Congress in decades,
some House Republicans have begun describing the state of their party as an
international embarrassment.
Through it
all, Mr. Santos has been his own symbol of chaos. After The New York Times
revealed Mr. Santos’s myriad lies about his biography and federal investigators
accused him of multiple crimes, his fellow Republicans protected him.
George
Santos, who was expelled from Congress, has told so many stories they can be
hard to keep straight. We cataloged them, including major questions about his
personal finances and his campaign fund-raising and spending.
But in the
end, it was Republicans’ raw political interest that was Mr. Santos’s undoing,
even though it left them with an immediate math problem. Having concluded that
allowing Mr. Santos to seek re-election would cost Republicans a competitive
congressional seat — and hurt their chances of holding the majority — Mr.
McCarthy urged on a House Ethics Committee investigation into his conduct was
more aggressive and public than is traditionally the case.
The result
was a scathing Ethics Committee report. Many Republicans ultimately calculated
that the clear evidence of Mr. Santos’s lies and fraud was more damaging to the
party than the value of his single vote. Nearly half of them voted on Friday to
expel him. Several argued that Mr. Santos was too much of a drag on the
Republican brand in New York and that it would be easier for the party to win
the seat in the next election without him in it.
Since the
Civil War, no member of Congress had been expelled without a criminal
conviction. But members of the ethics panel argued a new standard could be set:
A damning bipartisan report from the committee could be grounds enough for
expulsion.
“To me, it
was a pretty easy vote to remove because there was a unanimous recommendation
out of the Ethics Committee,” said Representative Tom Cole of Oklahoma, the
chairman of the Rules Committee who is known as an institutionalist and a
leadership ally. “I have a lot of faith in those people. There’s no dissent
there.”
Mr. Cole
also acknowledged the tough political math for Republicans, who in January and
February will attempt to broker two different spending deals to keep the
government open. New York will not be able to have filled Mr. Santos’s seat by
then through a special election.
Mr.
Santos’s removal means that Mr. Johnson can lose only three Republican votes on
any piece of legislation to the Democrats if all in the chamber are present and
voting. Another Republican, Representative Bill Johnson of Ohio, announced he
would leave Congress in the coming months to become the president of Youngstown
State University in Ohio.
Mr. Cole
said he was not happy about voting for his party to lose a precious vote.
“I prefer
not to do that, but in this case, I think you need to do what the institution
demands,” Mr. Cole said.
Representative
Michael Guest, Republican of Mississippi and the Ethics Committee chairman,
said he appreciated that Mr. Johnson did not pressure members to save Mr.
Santos even as he made clear early in the week he had deep reservations about
removing the New Yorker.
“I do
applaud leadership for not whipping against this vote and trying to protect Mr.
Santos and keep him in the House of Representatives, just to protect our very
narrow majority,” Mr. Guest said.
Still,
several members said they were worried about retribution, and starting a new
cycle of payback. Already, actions like impeachment attempts, censure and
removing a member from committees — once exceedingly rare — have become more
common and embroiled in cycles of pettiness, politics and spite.
Even on his
way out, Mr. Santos attempted to bring a resolution to expel another New York
lawmaker, Representative Jamaal Bowman, a Democrat who pleaded guilty to
pulling a fire alarm in a House office building.
“We’ve been
lectured to politically for the last four years, a lot of it in the press,
about our institutions. What happened here today goes against the principles of
our institutions,” said Representative Byron Donalds, Republican of Florida,
who voted to save Mr. Santos. He dared lawmakers to oust a Democratic senator
who is also under indictment as payback: “Bring the articles for Bob Menendez
in the Senate,” he said.
Representative
Glenn F. Ivey, Democrat of Maryland and a member of the Ethics Committee, said
he had already noticed an uptick in complaints coming into the panel that
seemed personal and partisan.
“We’re
getting stuff coming through that does look like it’s really not up to the
standards of what should be coming to us,” Mr. Ivey said. “The tit-for-tat kind
of stuff, we have to be careful about.”
Still, he
said he was proud of the work of the committee, which over many decades has
earned a reputation for fecklessness and secrecy.
“This
breadth of misconduct is really pretty astonishing,” Mr. Ivey said of Mr.
Santos. “The Ethics Committee, the view had become that we’re basically a
toothless tiger. This is where legitimate complaints went to die. And I hope
this changes that, and makes it clear, not only to the American people but to
ourselves, that we really are policing ourselves.”
Luke
Broadwater covers Congress with a focus on congressional investigations. More
about Luke Broadwater


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