Cherfilus-McCormick Slips the Expulsion Hook, and the Ethics Smoke Gets in Your Eye
United States – April 22, 2026 – Smoke is thick in D.C.: Rep. Cherfilus-McCormick resigned just before ethics could move toward punishment, and the timeline is the whole story.
Smoke from the Capitol grill is not going anywhere. You can almost hear the AM radio hiss of accountability, because on April 21, Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick resigned just before the House Ethics Committee was poised to recommend punishment. In plain sight, it looks less like due process and more like a scripted exit.
Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick resigns from Congress
According to Axios, she stepped away from Congress on Tuesday right before the Ethics Committee was set to recommend a penalty. The resignation was read on the House floor minutes later. The committee had already found her guilty of multiple charges, most notably funneling $5 million in COVID relief funds to her congressional campaign, though she denied wrongdoing.
In her statement, Cherfilus-McCormick complained the process was not fair. She said the Ethics Committee refused her new attorney’s request for time to prepare a defense, and she argued that acting while a criminal indictment is pending would trample due process. She described the investigation as a “witch hunt” and chose to step away effective immediately. AP reported she quit moments before a hearing that could have led to a recommendation that she be expelled.
The money trail and the criminal overlay
Because this is America, the story does not stop at resignation. It points back to money. Axios reports the Ethics Committee’s key finding involved $5 million in COVID relief funds going to her campaign. CBS News adds the criminal overlay, saying she has been charged with stealing nearly $5 million in FEMA funds for her campaign and has pleaded not guilty.
AP also notes the Ethics Committee investigation lasted more than two years, and that it determined she violated multiple federal laws and House rules. And the timeline is crucial: multiple outlets describe the resignation as happening moments before the committee could determine sanctions.
Why resigning matters
The incentive is simple. If you are on the cusp of a vote that could expel you, you duck the vote by walking out. Axios reports she was likely nearing expulsion, and even fellow House Democrats were saying they could no longer countenance her continued presence. AP frames it as pressure within her party, with support increasingly in doubt right as the committee was ready to act.
What this means for America
Cherfilus-McCormick argued against punishing before due process is complete, and AP quoted her warning that due process should not be overridden by allegations alone. That matters.
But here’s the core point: due process protects both sides. It protects people from unfair punishment and it protects the public from watching officials dodge oversight with a stage-managed exit. If Congress keeps rewarding resignation-without-resolution, then the only thing that becomes certain is that the blueprint gets used again.
So what comes next: tougher anti-grift standards, cleaner reporting, and stricter enforcement of campaign finance rules tied to federal relief money. Ethics should work like a safety inspection, not weekend entertainment. Tell me, America, when they smell accountability coming, are they going to keep walking out the side door, or are we finally going to make the exits slam from the inside?
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