• SuperDuper
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    521 year ago

    For how blatant his lies and fabrications were, and how brazenly he stole and misued money, I’m honestly impressed that he got into office in the first place (who tf was running his opponent’s campaign?). Surviving 11 months after that was just standard “Republicans refusing to hold each other accountable” behavior. But man, gotta admit the guy pulled off a pretty decent con.

    • @Nightwingdragon
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      English
      531 year ago

      I’m honestly impressed that he got into office in the first place (who tf was running his opponent’s campaign?).

      His opponent repeatedly tried to blow the whistle at what was going on with Santos’ campaign, but was all but ignored by the media who considered it a low-level race not worth covering. I think it took about a month after the election before the media started to actually give a damn.

    • @psmgx
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      41 year ago

      The GOP wants blackmail and leverage options, and only when they have the power.

      Santos’s lies were pretty clear, blatant, and he was grifting his own party. Useless as an asset, and detrimental to his own people.

    • @Furedadmins
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      11 year ago

      He is from a safe very red district so the craziest person wins the primary and then basically gets in free after that.

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        101 year ago

        It’s a blue district, though only D+2 (meaning it tends to be 2 points more towards Dems than the national average). It did vote for Bush in 2004, but is otherwise straight blue for President since 1992. Most recently went for Biden by +10 points.

        • @Furedadmins
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          91 year ago

          Republicans have historically held that seat with very large majorities. Over 70% during Bush and Obama presidencies. Trump was enough to drag it down but then as soon as he was off the ballot it’s back to crazy land Republicans. I might be wrong but to me that says deep red.