Republican Rep.-elect George Santos of New York is a member of a party that has normalized the use of misdirection, factual distortions and systematic disinformation to advance its political agenda. Yet as the new Congress convenes this week it seems possible that Santos’ fledgling political career could, potentially, end quickly over lies he’s told. How has he achieved this unusual distinction?
It mainly comes down to the fact that he has not told the right kinds of lies.
The Trump era taught us that big lies are tolerable on the right when it comes to exploiting the base’s existing biases, prejudices and mistrust. But Santos’ clumsy fabrications about his background and resume are about himself rather than perceived enemies, and the sheer number and scope of them have shocked and generated unease among his allies. Santos’ disinformation generates controversy — but it lacks the crucial political benefit of getting the base excited, which makes the GOP less likely to put up with it.
Trump’s most powerful lies exploited underlying beliefs that his base already had.
If you haven’t been keeping up with the bizarre Santos story, it turns out he’s lied about a shocking number of biographical details that likely were key to his appeal as he made his successful bid for Congress. Reporting from a number of news outlets in recent weeks has shown that he’s lied about where he went to school, where he went to college, where he worked, his mother’s death, his religious background, and his relation to Holocaust survivors. Santos has grudgingly admitted to many of the big lies about his background, but he’s declined to step down and he’s been comically flippant about the public’s discovery that his entire personal narrative was basically made up. He downplays his systematic dishonesty as a matter of mere embellishment, and he’s asked for people to move on because “we all make mistakes.”
Perhaps Santos thinks he can get away with being a fraud because the most popular Republican in America is, in many ways, a fraud. But it’s not exactly working for him so far. Fox News surprisingly raked Santos over the coals for his lies in a tough interview; one of Santos’ incoming Republican colleagues has already called for a House ethics investigation into his lies; and a veteran Republican congressman from Texas has said Santos should consider resigning. On top of all that, federal prosecutors are investigating his campaign funding and expenditures, some of which already look shady so far according to reporting from The New York Times. Republican leadership has been silent so far, but if they turn on Santos he’d be in serious trouble; the House has a procedure available to it for expelling Santos from Congress if he refuses to resign. While I wouldn’t bet on GOP leadership doing the right thing here, it’s worth thinking about why Santos’ lies seem so jarring even to some of its own members.









