Rep. George Santos' days in Congress may be numbered, as campaigns to expel the first-term Republican swell on both sides of the political aisle — and among members of the public.

The 15-foot inflatable — depicting the New York congressman wearing a tie that reads, “Full of Lies” — tumbled around the lawn and floated through the air as demonstrators surrounded it.

The activists' signs featured messages like, “George Santos: Blowing Off His Constituents,” and “Expel Santos — He’s Full of Lies.”

The George Santos balloon flies near the Capitol on Nov. 28, as lawmakers inside weigh an expulsion of the indicted congressman.Drew Angerer/Getty

George santos balloon washington 11 28 23

Drew Angerer/Getty

Weeks after Santos flipped a House seat red in the 2022 midterm elections, a bombshellNew York Timesreport claimed that large portions of his resumecould not be substantiated. But whatbegan as an embarrassmentfor Santos — he’d been caught exaggerating his education, fabricating his employment history and sharing misleading details about his upbringing — quickly turned serious, as allegations of fraud and questions about his finances arose.

Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty

George santos balloon washington 11 28 23

By the time Santos was sworn in to the House in January, he was already understateandfederalinvestigation. He was ultimately charged with23 federal counts, including money laundering, identity theft, theft of public funds, falsifying records, and making false statements to the House of Representatives. Hepleaded not guiltyto all charges.

New York Republican George Santos speaks to reporters after winning a House race in 2022.Alejandra Villa Loarca/Newsday RM via Getty

Baldwin, N.Y.: Congressman-elect George Devolder Santos joined the newly elected GOP members of the Senate and Congress during a press conference on November. 9, 2022 in Baldwin, New York.

A resolution to expel Santos failed to pass earlier this month, but the situation changed two weeks later, when the House Ethics Committee released the findings of its monthslong probe into Santos' conduct. In the committee’s report, it claimed to have gathered “substantial evidence” that Santos engaged in “uncharged and unlawful conduct,” including allegedly using campaign donations to buy Botox injections, and make purchases at Sephora, Hermes and OnlyFans.

“Representative George Santos cannot be trusted,” the House Ethics Committee declared in the report. “At nearly every opportunity, he placed his desire for private gain above his duty to uphold the Constitution, federal law, and ethical principles.”

Within hours of the reports' release, Santos announced he would suspend his 2024 reelection campaign. In the absence of an immediate resignation, House Ethics Chair Michael Guest spearheaded the charge to once again seek an expulsion of the congressman.

A new vote on whether to expel him is expected this week — and this time around, Santos said, he believes it will be successful.

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She continued: “What more do we need to know? Expel George Santos. New York 3rd District residents deserve real representation—not a lying lawmaker cheating the system at every opportunity for his own gain.”

source: people.com