George Santos targeted by GOP colleague’s new legislation

Rep. George Santos’ (R-NY) most staunch Republican opponent is taking a new step to thwart the embattled congressman.

Fellow first-term New York Rep. Anthony D’Esposito (R-NY) has circulated a proposed bill among GOP colleagues that would prevent lawmakers convicted from certain offenses from profiting off book deals, speech commissions, television shows and other perks, reported to Politico, which obtained a copy of the text.

“[The bill would] prohibit Members of the House of Representatives who are convicted of offenses involving financial or campaign finance fraud from receiving compensation for biographies, media appearances, or expressive or creative works, and for other purposes,” the text reads.

The concern is that Santos could profit off of his deceptions after leaving office, and a spokesman for the embattled lawmaker strongly pushed back on the move and called on fellow Republicans to focus on Democrats instead.

READ MORE: Fox News insiders think ‘they’re going to lose’ Dominion lawsuit: CNN media analyst

D’Esposito was the first House Republican to call for Santos’ resignation after his background was called into question and various investigations were opened into his finances, and while his proposal doesn’t identify the scandal-plagued lawmaker, a Republican with direct knowledge said it was a response to the situation.

Related articles

We Need Your Help

We’re moving into the second half of our Annual TPM Membership Drive. So we’re at the crunch time when we...

‘Massive cover up’ fears raised as House panel splits on clemency for Ghislaine Maxwell



Ghislaine Maxwell's condition to testify under oath — but only under the condition of clemency — has split House Oversight and Government Reform Committee members over whether President Donald Trump should grant her that pardon, Rep. James Comer (R-KY) told Politico on Wednesday.

Maxwell, Jeffrey Epstein's co-conspirator, was deposed by the committee and invoked her Fifth Amendment right to decline to answer the group's questions. Trump is the only one with the power to pardon her, something he has not yet ruled out.

Comer told Politico that he did not favor a pardon for Maxwell, a former confidant to the late financier and convicted child sex offender. When asked whether striking a deal with Maxwell could provide useful testimony, Comer did not share who on the panel supported granting her clemency.

"A lot of people do," Comer said.

"My committee’s split on that," Comer said. "I don’t speak for my committee."

"I think it looks bad," he added. "Honestly, other than Epstein, the worst person in this whole investigation is Maxwell."

Rep. Robert Garcia (D-CA) said that Democrats on the committee collectively oppose a pardon for Maxwell.

"That would be a huge step backwards, and, quite frankly, so disrespectful to the survivors," he said in an interview. "She is a known abuser. She is a known liar."

"If the DOJ or Oversight Republicans are out there trying to negotiate some sort of pardon that is... not only a huge slap in the face to this investigation, to anyone, to the American public," Garcia said. "It’s a part of a massive cover up."