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Rep. George Santos says he expects to be kicked out of Congress as expulsion vote looms

FILE - Rep. George Santos, R-N.Y., talks to reporters as House Republicans hold a caucus meeting at the Capitol in Washington, Friday, Oct. 13, 2023. Santos has said he expected to be expelled from Congress following a scathing report by the House Ethics Committee that found substantial evidence of lawbreaking by the New York Republican. The comments on Friday, Nov. 24, came during a three-hour conversation on X Spaces in which Santos lashed out at colleagues and described the committee's report as slanderous. (AP Photo/Mariam Zuhaib, File) (Mariam Zuhaib, Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

NEW YORK ā€“ Rep. George Santos said he expects to be expelled from Congress following a scathing report by the House Ethics Committee that found substantial evidence of lawbreaking by the New York Republican.

In a defiant speech Friday sprinkled with taunts and obscenities aimed at his congressional colleagues, Santos insisted he was ā€œnot going anywhere.ā€ But he acknowledged that his time as a member of Congress, at least, may soon be coming to an end.

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ā€œI know Iā€™m going to get expelled when this expulsion resolution goes to the floor,ā€ he said Friday night during a conversation on X Spaces. ā€œIā€™ve done the math over and over, and it doesnā€™t look really good.ā€

The comments came one week after the Republican chairman of the House Ethics Committee, Michael Guest, introduced a resolution to expel Santos once the body returns from Thanksgiving break.

While Santos has survived two expulsion votes, many of his colleagues who formerly opposed the effort now say they support it, citing the findings of the committeeā€™s monthslong investigation into a wide range of alleged misconduct by Santos.

The report found Santos used campaign funds for personal purposes, such as purchases at luxury retailers and adult content websites, then caused the campaign to file false or incomplete reports.

ā€œRepresentative Santos sought to fraudulently exploit every aspect of his House candidacy for his own personal financial profit,ā€ investigators wrote. They noted that he did not cooperate with the report and repeatedly ā€œevadedā€ straightforward requests for information.

On Friday, Santos said he did not want to address the specifics of the report, which he claimed were ā€œslanderousā€ and ā€œdesigned to force me out of my seat.ā€ Any defense of his conduct, he said, could be used against him in the ongoing criminal case brought by federal prosecutors.

Instead, Santos struck a contemplative tone during the three-hour livestream, tracing his trajectory from Republican ā€œit girlā€ to ā€œthe Mary Magdalene of the United States Congress.ā€ And he lashed out at his congressional colleagues, accusing them of misconduct ā€“ such as voting while drunk ā€“ that he said was far worse than anything heā€™d done.

ā€œThey all act like theyā€™re in ivory towers with white pointy hats and theyā€™re untouchable,ā€ he said. ā€œWithin the ranks of United States Congress thereā€™s felons galore, thereā€™s people with all sorts of shystie backgrounds.ā€

His decision not to seek reelection, he said, was not because of external pressure, but due to his frustration with the ā€œsheer arroganceā€ of his colleagues.

ā€œThese people need to understand itā€™s done when I say itā€™s done, when I want it to be done, not when they want it to be done,ā€ he added. ā€œThatā€™s kind of where we are there.ā€


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