CNN —
Rep. George Santos told Tuesday’s closed-door GOP conference that he wants to leave his two committees until his issues are resolved, three members told CNN.
The New York Republican, who faced calls for his resignation over false statements — including about his work experience, educational history and identity — serves on the Science, Space and Technology Committee and the Small Business Committee. Federal prosecutors are also investigating Santos’ finances, and he continues to face countless questions about his personal finances.
He was first elected last fall.
Santos declined to speak to reporters as he left the meeting.
Santos met with House Speaker Kevin McCarthy on Monday night.
Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Green of Georgia told CNN that Santos’ decision to “abstain” from the committees was his own. She said he told the conference he would step down from the committees as the GOP tries to oust Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota from the Foreign Affairs Committee.
Democrats cited the growing misrepresentations and scrutiny Santos faced as an example of hypocrisy for Republicans who ousted Omar and two other House Democrats — California Reps. Adam Schiff and Eric Swawell — from the committees. While Schiff and Swawell were able to be unilaterally kicked out of the House Intelligence Committee by McCarthy, Omar’s position on House foreign affairs would need a House vote, which Republican leaders have yet to force.
“He just felt that there was really so much drama surrounding the situation and especially what we were doing to work to remove Ilhan Omar from the Foreign Affairs Committee,” Green told CNN.
She added: “But Mr. Santos’ statement there simply says that he spoke with Chairman McCarthy and made that decision on his own.”
Small Business Committee Chairman Roger Williams, R-Texas, said he thought Santos “probably made the right decision” to step down from his committee duties until questions about his past and financial irregularities were resolved.
Leaving his office late last week on Capitol Hill, Santos told a reporter he would hold a news conference “soon” to “discuss everything.”
“We will give you all the answers to everything you ask,” he said.
In recent days, Santos has faced a series of questions about his campaign finance, including inquiries about donors as well as campaign disbursements, including dozens of expenses that his campaign reported at exactly $199.99, one cent below the threshold above which campaign must keep receipts.
The campaign’s legal center filed a complaint with the FEC that described his payments as “strange and seemingly impossible.” It noted that one of the $199.99 costs was supposedly for a “hotel stay” at the luxury W Hotel South Beach in Florida in October 2021, where the lowest-priced room would normally cost more than $700 dollar.
Last week, Santos also filed multiple amended reports with the FEC that only added to the confusion about the source of loans he said he made to his campaign.
In some documents, the campaign did not check boxes indicating that two six-figure loans came from the candidate’s personal funds.
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