Get George Santos the Hell Out of Congress | Opinion
When I was a small boy and frustrated about one thing or another, my mother reassured me that "everything works out in the end."
The saying drove me nuts. "When is the end?" I'd ask her. "Next week? Next year? In a century? Do we just wait?"
Optimistic forecasts about anything often overlook damage that can occur in the meantime.
The famed British economist John Maynard Keynes once wrote, "in the long run, we're all dead." His point was that most people don't care that the economy eventually will correct itself because people live today and often can't afford to wait.
This morning, I heard a pundit on the radio declare with utter certainty that Republican Representative George Santos will resign. That's an easy call. After all, 78 percent of Santos' constituents say he should go. Even two-thirds of those who voted for him last November say they wouldn't have if they'd known what they do now.
His favorable rating in the district is a whopping 6 percent.

But when will he resign? It makes a huge difference if an elected member of Congress who's revealed to be an utter charlatan—who has lied to voters about almost every aspect of his background—resigns tomorrow or remains in office for another year or more. Every day that goes by with Santos still in Congress brings more disgrace upon America's governing institutions, at a time when they're already near rock bottom.
I have the same concern with other upbeat predictions.
"Inflation is slowing," they say. That's nice, but it avoids the big underlying question: Will inflation slow quickly enough to stop the Federal Reserve Board from pushing America into a recession with ever higher interest rates?
"Ukraine is winning," they say. I'm glad. But the war is moving into its second year, and the real questions are how much of Ukraine and its people will be destroyed before Putin ends his attacks, and how close will we come to nuclear Armageddon?
"Trump will be prosecuted," they say. Good. But when? I fear Special Counsel Jack Smith and his boss, Attorney General Merrick Garland, will wait until after the 2024 presidential election, which raises the horrific possibility that we might have to go through another four-year Trump presidency.
And what about police violence and institutional racism? "The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice," the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. once assured us. But how long before it bends? How much more violence until then? How much more racism, xenophobia, misogyny, and homophobia?
And there are other crises: the climate, widening inequality, attacks on democracy, and so much more. I have difficulty believing they'll all just work out in the end.
Look, I'm a cup-half-full kind of guy. I always hope for the best. The problem with my mother's "everything works out in the end" optimism isn't just that a lot can go wrong along the way. It also invites a naive fatalism, as if no action is necessary now because everything will be fine eventually.
But rosy scenarios are dangerous bunk if they lead to passivity. We're not going to get anywhere if we sit back and assume that everything will work out. We have to take action.
Demand Trump must be prosecuted. Take on the climate crisis. Support Ukraine. Don't let the Fed push us into a recession. Get Santos the hell out of Congress. And keep fighting for social justice.
And in all other respects as well, be an activist. Your indignation and energy are needed.
My mother was right about a lot of things. But she was wrong about this. Nothing important works out in the end unless we work hard for it now.
Robert Reich is professor of public policy at the University of California, Berkeley, and the author of Saving Capitalism: For the Many, Not the Few and The Common Good. His new book, The System: Who Rigged It, How We Fix It, is out now.
The views expressed in this article are the writer's own.