George Santos joins CAMEO just days after he was expelled from Congress: Long Island liar launches new bid to rake in cash after he was kicked out by colleagues over OnlyFans Ethics report

  • Santos’ profile on the site, which allows the public to pay celebrities for commissioned videos, includes a biography calling him a “former congressional ‘icon’.”
  • SantaOs spent the weekend criticizing his former New York GOP colleagues on X, and on Monday morning tweeted, “The truth will set me free.”

Ousted Rep. George Santos appears to have a new side project: He’s launched a Cameo account to sell personalized videos.

Santos’ profile on the site, which allows the public to pay celebrities for commissioned videos, includes a biography that calls him a “former congressional icon” and describes him as “an expelled member of Congress from New York.”

The link to the page is now in Santos X’s bio.

The video started at $75 and rose to $200 on Monday before selling out.

Santos spent the weekend criticizing his former New York GOP colleagues on X, and on Monday morning tweeted, “The truth will set me free.”

The congressman claimed that a “heavily intoxicated Brandon Williams assaulted two former employees who resigned from their positions earlier this year due to his terrible temperament and terrible treatment of his employees,” referring to Rep. Brandon Williams, RN.Y.

Ousted Rep. George Santos appears to have a new side job: He's launching an account called Cameo to sell personalized videos starting at $75.

Ousted Rep. George Santos appears to have a new side job: He’s launching an account called Cameo to sell personalized videos starting at $75.

He said he would file an ethics complaint against Rep. Nicole Malliotakis, R-N.Y., over her “questionable stock trading since joining the Budget Committee.”

He also made insinuations about Malliotakis’ sexual orientation after she voted against same-sex marriage as a state legislator but later said she regretted it.

“@NMalliotakis the difference between you and me is that I don’t live in denial, I’m PROUD GAY and I’m not afraid to say it,” Santos quipped.

The former congressman also accused Rep. Mike Lawler, D-N.Y., of “money laundering” his campaign using Checkmate Strategies, a company Lawler owns part of. He went after Rep. Nick Lalota for attending Hofstra for a law degree while serving as head of the Suffolk County Board of Elections.

A Long Island congressman who stole donor funds to spend on OnlyFans and Botox left Capitol Hill on Friday, becoming the sixth House member in history to be ousted.

More than 100 Republicans joined Democrats in ousting the fabulist liar in Friday’s historic vote in which the total vote was 311 to 114, with two members voting “present.”

Santos left the House of Representatives minutes before the vote ended that would decide his fate. Immediately afterward, he warned reporters that the House had “set a dangerous new precedent for itself,” adding, “Fuck this place.”

Facing a daunting vote count, 35-year-old serial fabulist George Santos remained defiant until the end but said he would leave Congress if it was “the will of God.”

His mountains of lies include fabricating family ties to the Holocaust, killing his mother in the 9/11 attacks, working on Wall Street, recovering from a brain tumor, being Ukrainian-Jewish, and starting a charity.

Santos survived a vote to expel him last month because 31 Democrats and a majority of Republicans voted to keep him in, with many saying they would prefer to wait until the Ethics Committee’s report detailing his misdeeds comes out. To remove a sitting member of Congress, a two-thirds vote in the House of Representatives is required.

This vote was different, with 105 Republicans voting to oust their colleague. Santos is the first member to be expelled in more than two decades.

A damning ethics report alleged he improperly diverted campaign donations to pay for Botox treatments, Hermes bags, OnlyFans purchases and casino cash withdrawals.

Now the slim majority of Republicans in the House of Representatives is even smaller, and the GOP can only afford to lose three votes. The new breakdown includes 221 Republicans and 213 Democrats.