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Santos Expelled from House Transcript

Santos Expelled from House Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
For the first time in more than two decades, Congress has expelled one of its own. As Congressional correspondent Lisa Desjardins explains, Representative George Santos is out of a job.
Mike Johnson (00:10):
The yays are 311, the nays are 114, with two recorded as present.
Lisa Desjardins (00:16):
The new Speaker of the House announced the result solemnly.
Mike Johnson (00:20):
Two-thirds voting on the affirmative, the resolution is adopted. The motion to reconsider is laid upon the table.
Lisa Desjardins (00:22):
The first expulsion of a Republican from Congress, and more than 100 Republicans voted to do it.
Mike Johnson (00:28):
The clerk will notify the governor of the State of New York of the action of the House.
Lisa Desjardins (00:32):
It was a historic turn of events.
George Santos (00:33):
This race is for me a personal race. It's [inaudible 00:00:37]
Lisa Desjardins (00:36):
Just last year, he was a little known congressional candidate, running as a Trump supporter who embraced Long Island's diversity, and was tough on crime.
Speaker 5 (00:45):
[inaudible 00:00:45]. George Santos vows to tackle crime head on in our district.
Lisa Desjardins (00:48):
He won by seven points. But within weeks, a local newspaper story of his misconduct went national. Santos lied about graduating from college, about working for top New York financial firms, and even his claims of being a Jew. He downplayed what he did.
George Santos (01:04):
[inaudible 00:01:05]. Did I embellish my resume? Yes, I did, and I'm sorry. I'm still the same guy. I'm not a fraud. I'm not a cartoon character.
Lisa Desjardins (01:13):
Calls for removal already hovered as he took the oath of office.
Daniel Goldman (01:16):
George Santos needs to be held accountable for his lies.
Lisa Desjardins (01:20):
Including from fellow Republicans in New York.
Joseph Cairo, Jr. (01:22):
Any of our events. As I said, he's disgraced the House of Representatives, and we do not consider him one of our congresspeople.
George Santos (01:29):
I feel confident that I get to fight it and I have my day in court. [inaudible 00:01:32].
Lisa Desjardins (01:31):
Santos survived two previous efforts-
Speaker 8 (01:34):
[inaudible 00:01:34]?
Lisa Desjardins (01:34):
... to expel him, as the House awaited an Ethics Committee report that came earlier this month.
Speaker 9 (01:39):
Bill, good morning. It's pretty damning here.
Speaker 10 (01:41):
Substantial evidence that Congressman George Santos broke the law.
Scott Macfarlane (01:45):
I've read a number of House Ethics Committee reports over the years. This one is uniquely exhaustive, damning, and scathing.
Lisa Desjardins (01:52):
In a 56-page investigative report, the committee, better known for giving warnings, was searing, writing, "Representative Santos sought to fraudulently exploit every aspect of his House candidacy for his own profit," and finding that Santos bilked donors, reported fake loans, stole money from his campaign, and that funds were spent on things that appeared personal, like at a casino, on an adult entertainment website, and for Botox.
Protesters (02:19):
[inaudible 00:02:23].
Lisa Desjardins (02:25):
That came on top of the 23 felony counts he faces, including money laundering and wire fraud. Some Republicans have increasingly demanded his expulsion.
Speaker 13 (02:35):
[inaudible 00:02:36] recognizes Mr. D'Esposito.
Anthony D'Esposito (02:35):
It is in the best interest of the constituents of New York 3 and all Americans that he is expelled from the House of Representatives.
Lisa Desjardins (02:45):
Santos pleaded not guilty in court.
Speaker 15 (02:47):
[inaudible 00:02:48].
George Santos (02:48):
I'm going to keep fighting. I'm going to keep fighting for what I believe in. I'm going to keep fighting to represent my district.
Lisa Desjardins (02:52):
And in Congress, maintained that he is the victim of a smear campaign who should be given time to defend himself.
George Santos (02:59):
Mr. Speaker, efforts taken by other members in this body to act as judge, jury, and executioner are unconscionable and reckless to our Republican system of government. I stand today to continue to prove my innocence.
Lisa Desjardins (03:12):
The idea of expelling a member before his day in court gave many pause.
Troy Nehls (03:17):
Kicking out Mr. Santos is setting a very dangerous precedent. Never before has Congress expelled a member based on indictments. Indictments require nothing more than probable cause. An indictment is not a conviction.
Lisa Desjardins (03:37):
But as evidence mounted, including former staffers admitting wrongdoing, so did votes against him.
George Santos (03:42):
It's in [inaudible 00:03:43].
Speaker 17 (03:43):
You are a criminal. You are an absolute criminal.
Lisa Desjardins (03:44):
Now Santos has bigger concerns.
George Santos (03:44):
Excuse me.
Speaker 18 (03:44):
George, are you going to jail?
Speaker 17 (03:44):
I know you have [inaudible 00:03:49].
George Santos (03:44):
Absolutely not. Absolutely not. If that's how we-
Lisa Desjardins (03:50):
With a criminal trial set for next fall. If convicted, the congressman who spent less than a year representing New York could face a prison term measured in decades.
Speaker 1 (04:00):
And Lisa joins us now with more on today's historic development. Lisa, help us understand what this means for the congressman's seat and just for Congress more broadly.
Lisa Desjardins (04:10):
Republicans are nervous. There is a chance in the special election to fill this seat that they could lose it, in fact. So we're going to watch that very closely. (04:17) It's also interesting history-wise. One reason that we know this is historic, this happens so seldom, the vote was close going into it, but it was another member of the Republican Party, Congressman Max Miller, who sent out an email to his colleagues saying that he and his mother personally were victims of George Santos, that when they gave money to the campaign, they were bilked out of ... Ultimately lost some $30,000. And that influenced Republicans' choice, I think, to get rid of him. (04:43) One other note, I think, it's important to say, there was real divide among Republicans about this, as you heard in the piece, and I think that divide may remain. There was a little bit of bitterness here leaving ... And some Republicans thinking this was an incredible mistake. Others thinking it had to happen. So something to watch for in that Republican conference.
Speaker 1 (05:02):
I'll be following the impact of it all. Another historic day on Capitol Hill. Lisa Desjardins, thank you.
Lisa Desjardins (05:07):
You're welcome.
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