logo
Login Subscribe
Google Play App Store
  • News
    • Obituaries
    • Lifestyle
    • Opinion
  • Sports
  • E-edition
  • Calendar
  • Archives
  • Contact
    • Contact Us
    • Advertisers
    • Form Submission
    • About Us
    • News
      • Obituaries
      • Lifestyle
      • Opinion
    • Sports
    • E-edition
    • Calendar
    • Archives
    • Contact
      • Contact Us
      • Advertisers
      • Form Submission
      • About Us
Constitution 101: Congressional Punishment and Expulsion Clause
commentary
August 14, 2025
Constitution 101: Congressional Punishment and Expulsion Clause

On Dec. 21, 2023, the United States House of Representatives voted 311-114 to expel Rep. George Santos, R-N.Y., from Congress. Doing so was the first time a member had been expelled without a prior conviction of a crime since the Civil War.

While Santos eventually would plead guilty to identity theft and wire fraud and be sent to prison, his conviction was not necessary for his expulsion because Congress makes its own rules on how it treats it members. Article I, Section V, Clause II of the Constitution states, “Each House may determine the Rules of its Proceedings, punish its Members for disorderly Behaviour, and, with the Concurrence of two thirds, expel a Member.”

Fortunately, not many members of Congress have been expelled, but there have been some. In the House there have only been six. Three of them — Reps. John Bullock Clark, D-Mo.; John W. Reid, D-Mo.; and Henry C. Burnett, D-Va. — were expelled during the Civil War. All three were elected to Union states but left to join the Confederacy. In 1980 Michael Myers was expelled after he escaped from a mental hospital and went on a killing spree. Wait, wrong Myers. Michael J. Myers, D-Penn., was expelled in 1980 after he was arrested in an FBI sting for accepting bribes. In 2002 James A. Traficant, DOhio, was expelled after being convicted of bribery, racketeering and tax evasion. Finally, there was Santos in 2023. Six in 250 years is actually not that bad. The Senate, however, more than doubled that number.

While the Senate has expelled 15 senators, the number is a bit deceiving. Fourteen were expelled during the Civil War for supporting the Confederacy: Sens. James M. Mason, D-Va.; Robert M.T. Hunter, D-Va.; Thomas L. Clingman, D-N.C.; Thomas Bragg, D-N.C.; James Chesnut Jr., DS. C.; Alfred O.P. Nicholson, D-Tenn.; William K. Sebastian, D-Ark.; Charles B. Mitchel, DArk.; John Hemphill, DTexas; Louis T. Wigfall, D-Texas; John C. Breckinridge, D-Ky.; Trusten Polk, D-Mo.; Waldo P. Johnson, D-Mo.; and Jesse D. Bright, D-Ind. Ten of the names make sense as their states eventually seceded from the Union. Three of them, however — Breckenridge, Polk and Johnson — were from Union states but left to serve the Confederacy. The most interesting of the group is Jesse Bright from Indiana.

Although he was a senior Democrat from a Northern state who served as president pro tempore when the Civil War began, Bright still strongly supported slavery.

On Aug. 17, 1861, Texan Thomas Lincoln was arrested trying to cross into the Confederacy with weapons and a letter from Bright to Confederate President Jefferson Davis. The letter read, “Allow me to introduce to your acquaintance my friend, Thomas B. Lincoln of Texas. He visits your capital mainly to dispose of what he regards a great improvement in fire-arms. I recommend him to your favorable consideration as a gentleman of the first respectability, and reliable in every respect.”

When the Senate reconvened the following December, a resolution was passed to expel Bright. The five-man Judiciary Committee met and agreed with the charges. Senate debates were headed by Massachusetts Sen. Charles Sumner, an abolitionist Republican, who hated Bright. After a heated debate before a now Republican- controlled Senate, Bright made his closing remarks, gathered his belongings and left the chamber knowing he had lost. He was expelled by a vote of 32-14.

The only non-Civil War expulsion from the Senate occurred during John Adams’ administration. William Blount was appointed Governor of Tennessee by George Washington, and when Tennessee gained statehood, he was its first senator.

Falling into financial difficulties from land speculation, Blount hatched a scheme where Natives and British soldiers would attack Spanish Florida and Louisiana with hopes of claiming new land. When his plan was discovered, Adams himself wrote a letter to Congress asking them to use their powers to expel Blount. The Senate complied with a vote of 25-1 making Blount the first person expelled from Congress.

While expulsion is the extreme, this clause also allows Congress to “punish its Members for disorderly Behaviour.” The two types of punishments used are censures for the Senate and censures and reprimands (a lesser censure) for the House. These are formal public rebukes, but while a disciplinary action, they do not remove the member from office or revoke their rights and privileges.

The Senate has only censured nine, the first in 1811 of Massachusetts Federalist Timothy Pickering for reading confidential material in open session and the last in 1990 of David Durenberger, R-Minn., for unethical conduct relating to reimbursement of Senate expenses and acceptance of outside payments and gifts.

The House has had 23 censures and 10 reprimands. The first in 1831 of Ohio National Republican William Stanbery for insulting the Speaker of the House and the last in 2025 of Al Green, D-Texas, for disrupting President Trump’s joint session address. The most famous censure was 1954 Joseph McCarthy, RWis., for his role in the Red Scare.

When our founders created Congress, they knew the body needed a way to police themselves, so they borrowed the idea from Parliament. Yet unlike Parliament which only needs a majority to expel members, our founders wanted to protect the people’s choice of representatives by requiring a two-thirds vote. It is clear the protection worked, maybe too well. Outside of the Civil War only four members of Congress have been expelled in its 236-year history which honestly is probably not enough.

James Finck is a professor of American history at the University of Science and Arts of Oklahoma. He can be reached at HistoricallySpeak-ing1776@ gmail.com.

Lefties making things right
A: Main, News...
Lefties making things right
By SHAUNA BELYEU GENERAL MANAGER 
August 14, 2025
If today’s paper looks a little backward, that’s the point. We’re flipping things around in honor of International Left-Handers Day, a moment for all the lefties out there to enjoy the upper hand. Eve...
this is a test
A: Main, News...
Left is Right
August 14, 2025
If this week’s backward paper seems to be coming out of left field, you’re probably right. In honor of International Left-Handers Day being celebrated worldwide, this week, this edition of The McIntos...
this is a test
National Night Out event puts on a show
A: Main, News...
National Night Out event puts on a show
August 14, 2025
The public met first responders at the annual National Night Out event, held Tuesday, Aug. 5 in downtown Eufaula. There were police, firefighters, sheriff ’s deputies, department of wildlife officers;...
this is a test
FAIC receives significant grant for new gear
A: Main, News...
FAIC receives significant grant for new gear
August 14, 2025
FAIC was recently awarded a grant for 15 sets of structure gear, 15 sets of dual certi wildland/extrication gear, helmets, nomex hoods, boots (structure and wildland) and gloves for a total of $82,485...
this is a test
Wildcat Welcome kicks off school year
A: Main, News...
Wildcat Welcome kicks off school year
August 14, 2025
Wildcat Welcome kicked off Checotah Schools new school year on Tuesday, Aug. 5 at Ogle Field. It is completely planned and organized by Checotah’s 21st CCLC After School programs. The entire track and...
this is a test
Testing yourself for left-handedness
News
Testing yourself for left-handedness
August 14, 2025
We all, of course, know in which hand we hold a pen, but how far does this bias extend throughout your body? Are you left-eared? Lefteyed? Here is a simple test you can apply to yourself. 1. Imagine t...
this is a test
ePaper
coogle_play
app_store
Editor Picks
Famous left-handers
News
Famous left-handers
August 14, 2025
Jason Alexander, actor Tim Allen, actor Duane Allman, guitarist Earl Anthony, bowler Nate Archibald, NBA player Aristotle, Greek philosopher Neil Armstrong, astronaut Dan Aykroyd, actor Cardi B, singe...
this is a test
News
What’s involved in producing a left-handed newspaper?
August 14, 2025
As you’ve already noticed, after thinking that there must have been some printing error with this edition of the Eufaula Indian Journal, this is a left-handed paper and was printed opposite of what yo...
this is a test
McIntosh County Free Fair Friday/Saturday
News
McIntosh County Free Fair Friday/Saturday
August 14, 2025
The annual McIntosh County Free Fair, hosted by the OSU Extension Center, will be held Friday, Aug. 15 and Saturday, Aug. 16 at the county fairgrounds in Eufaula. Exhibits will be on display Friday fr...
this is a test
Being a ‘Leftie’
commentary
Being a ‘Leftie’
August 14, 2025
Overall 40 percent of us are left-eared, 30 percent are left-eyed and 20 percent are left-footed, but only 10 percent of us are left-handed. I have the privilege of being all of these, so I’m an extre...
this is a test
News
Drummond fights against federal overreach
August 14, 2025
OKLAHOMA CITY – Attorney General Gentner Drummond is fighting to protect Oklahoma’s right to secure its communities through immigration law enforcement. He and a coalition of 22 attorneys general are ...
this is a test
Facebook
Twitter
Tweets
Twitter
Tweets

MCINTOSH COUNTY DEMOCRAT
300-A S. Broadway
Checotah, OK
74426

(918) 473-2313

This site complies with ADA requirements

© 2023 Mcintosh Democrat

  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Accessibility Policy