NEED TO KNOW

  • Florida Democrat resigned minutes before the House Ethics Committee sanctions hearing
  • Panel had found her guilty of 25 ethics violations tied to $5 million FEMA funds scheme
  • Expulsion vote was likely this week; she joins Santos pattern of pre-vote exits

WASHINGTON (TDR) — Democratic Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick of Florida resigned from Congress Tuesday afternoon, minutes before the House Ethics Committee convened to decide whether to recommend her expulsion.

The big picture: The timing was not incidental. Resigning before sanctions strips the committee of jurisdiction, ending the formal proceeding and denying the House a floor vote on expulsion.

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  • Chairman Michael Guest confirmed the panel lost jurisdiction the moment the resignation was read
  • The move mirrors former Rep. George Santos's trajectory, though Santos was expelled before he could resign

Why it matters: Expulsion is the House's heaviest sanction — only six members have ever been removed. Resignation lets members exit with pension and benefits intact and avoids a permanent mark on the congressional record.

  • Cherfilus-McCormick still retains accrued federal retirement eligibility
  • Her Florida 20th District seat now requires a special election

Driving the news: The resignation capped a two-year investigation, a rare public ethics trial, and a guilty finding on 25 of 27 allegations.

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What they're saying: The departure drew sharply different framings from the two sides of the aisle and from within her own caucus.

  • Cherfilus-McCormick, in her resignation statement — "This was not a fair process. Rather than play these political games, I choose to step away."
  • Rep. Yvette Clarke (D-NY), Congressional Black Caucus chair — praised her as having "contributed to the ongoing effort to ensure that Congress reflects the people it serves"
  • Ethics Chair Michael Guest (R-MS) — confirmed the panel "has now lost jurisdiction in this matter"

Yes, but: The "fair process" framing is difficult to square with the record. The bipartisan Ethics panel — split evenly between parties — found the violations proven after a rare adjudicatory trial in which she appeared and defended herself.

  • The committee's finding required agreement across party lines
  • Support from her own caucus had visibly eroded before the hearing

Between the lines: The resignation-before-expulsion playbook is becoming routine because it works. It preserves benefits, prevents a binding congressional verdict, and shifts the story from "expelled" to "stepped down." Both parties use it when the math turns against their member — which is why neither side has moved to close the loophole.

  • A floor expulsion vote would have created a roll-call record every member had to own
  • The resignation removes that accountability mechanism for colleagues who might have voted either way

What's next:

  • Gov. Ron DeSantis must set a special election date for Florida's 20th District
  • Her federal criminal trial on the FEMA funds charges proceeds independently
  • Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC) is still planning an expulsion vote against Rep. Cory Mills (R-FL), whose own ethics investigation continues

If resigning before a vote preserves benefits and avoids the record, should Congress close that door — or does forcing members to face the vote risk weaponizing expulsion across both parties?

Sources

This report was compiled using information from CBS News, CNN, NOTUS, Axios, and NBC Miami.

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