United States | Lexington

George Santos is the congressman America deserves

He is the right man for a democracy where winning matters more than anything else

Editor’s note: On May 10th federal prosecutors in New York unveiled 13 criminal charges against Mr Santos. The charges include wire fraud, money laundering, stealing public funds and lying to the House of Representatives. Mr Santos pled not guilty.

Why do the many lies of George Santos matter? Maybe some of Mr Santos’s constituents, in a district stretching along the North Shore of Long Island, voted for him in November because they were impressed he was a volleyball star at Baruch College and worked at Goldman Sachs, though none of that is so. Maybe they voted for him because he claimed to be Jewish, though he says now, with Seinfeldian sangfroid, that he meant only that he was “Jew-ish”. If such qualities did in fact seem like reasons enough to cast a ballot for someone, well, the voters deserve what they got.

But those qualities were probably not why most voters supported him. During the campaign his opponent raised doubts about his biography, as did a local newspaper, the North Shore Leader, which noted an “inexplicable” leap in his reported assets from zero to about $11m in two years. The national press exposed some of his shady business dealings, and Democrats branded him a “flat-out liar”. The Leader went on to endorse the Democratic candidate, saying it wanted to support a Republican but that Mr Santos “is so bizarre, unprincipled and sketchy that we cannot”.

This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline "The end of trust"

Disney’s second century

From the January 21st 2023 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from United States

Plenty of circumstantial evidence at Donald Trump’s trial

But prosecutors will need Michael Cohen to seal the deal

Why online marketplaces have not killed the estate sale

Is it easier to get people to buy old junk in person?


America’s federal district courts may soon be harder to manipulate

For once Democrats and (some) Republicans see eye-to-eye on judicial reform