Dec. 1 (UPI) — The House on Friday voted to remove Rep. George Santos from Congress as he faced federal fraud charges and a scathing House Ethics Committee report.
The chamber voted 311-114 to expel Santos, R-N.Y., meeting the two-thirds majority required, making him the first lawmaker to be ousted from the House in more than two decades.
The vote came after the investigation by the House Ethics Committee determined he “violated federal criminal laws.”
The vote marked the third attempt to oust Santos less than one year into his term.
A superseding indictment in October charged him with wire fraud, false statements, falsifying records, identity theft and access device fraud as he was accused of taking part in a credit card scheme that repeatedly charged the accounts of campaign contributors. Santos pleaded not guilty to those charges and a trial is set for September.
Previously, Santos pleaded not guilty in May to more than a dozen charges, including seven counts of wire fraud, three counts of money laundering, one count of theft of public funds and two counts of making false statements to the House of Representatives.
Santos has remained defiant as the scandal unfolded, refusing to resign under pressure from his colleagues while continuing to proclaim his innocence. However, he said he would not seek re-election.
“Every member expelled in history of this institution has been convicted of crimes or Confederate turncoats guilty of treason. Neither those apply to me, but here we are,” Santos said on the House floor Thursday. “On what basis does this body feel that precedent must be changed for me — an American citizen, duly elected, elected to represent the 3rd District of New York?
“I have been convicted of no crimes, Mr. Speaker.”
The ballot to remove Santos came after a tumultuous 11-month tenure in which the Long Island Republican came under immediate fire for exaggerating his net worth by millions of dollars while it was also found that he made numerous false claims to boost his persona, leading to a public apology for lying about his academic and professional background.
The vote to remove him marks only the sixth time a House lawmaker has faced removal since Congress was established in 1789.
It’s also the third such vote in the House since the Civil War and the first instance of a Republican legislator being expelled without prior criminal conviction in modern times.
The ethics panel, meanwhile, found Santos misused campaign funds for personal expenses, including vacations, beauty enhancements and a subscription to the adult website OnlyFans, among many other allegations.
Santos had survived two other votes to remove him. In May, the Republican-led chamber voted 221-204 along party lines to send a Democratic resolution to expel him to the House Ethics Committee and a second vote in November failed by a vote of 179-213.
During a Thursday news conference on the Capitol steps, Santos denounced the latest effort to remove him, saying of his colleagues: “This will haunt them in the future, where mere allegations are sufficient to have members removed from Congress, when duly elected by their people in their respective states and districts,” Santos told reporters.
“This is bullying. It’s all theater. It’s theater for the cameras. It’s theater for the microphones and theater for the American people.”
He also on Thursday introduced a resolution to expel Rep. Jamaal Bowman, D-N.Y., after he pleaded guilty in October to a misdemeanor charge of setting off a fire alarm inside an office building.