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Americano

Who on earth is George Santos...

Americano

The Spectator

Politics, News, News Commentary

4714 Ratings

🗓️ 7 March 2023

⏱️ 21 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Freddy Gray speaks to Shawn McCreesh, a features writer at New York Magazine who recently spent time with Republican Congressman, George Santos.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello and welcome to the Americano podcast, a series of discussions about American power,

0:11.6

politics and society. On each episode, I will talk to an American expert or an expert on

0:19.0

America about something that's going on in America in

0:22.8

2023. I'm thrilled to be joined by Sean McRish today, who is a features writer at New York

0:30.6

magazine covering media, politics and power, and he's written a very good piece called George Santos Maga It Girl.

0:40.4

Sean, I think for our British listeners, we should sort of do a bit of background on

0:44.3

George Santos in case they haven't been following his story, because it is an extraordinary

0:49.0

one.

0:49.9

Let me start with the middle of introduction.

0:51.4

You can correct me if I get anything wrong or add any more detail.

0:54.7

There was a bit of a Republican red wave in New York in the midterms in November.

0:59.8

And one of the seats that the Republicans won was the third district, which is Long Island.

1:05.7

That's right, isn't it?

1:06.9

Yeah, it's Long Island.

1:08.0

It's a little bit of Queens, but mostly it's Long Island.

1:10.5

And a little bit of Queens, but mostly it's Long Island. And a little bit of Queens. And George Santos, who was a gay, married man, won a seat there.

1:16.7

And there was a lot of sort of talk about this red wave in New York. And Santos was seen as a sort of possible star of this little wave.

1:25.0

But then it very quickly transpired that he was a, or is a, fabulous,

1:30.6

and had invented all sorts of extraordinary things about his past. There were then all

1:36.4

sorts of calls for him to be sort of thrown out of politics, but the Republicans have a very

1:40.5

slim majority, and he finds himself still in politics, still in Congress. Obviously,

1:47.4

it's quite a big deal to throw him out, but there aren't any obvious moves afoot to get rid of him.

...

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