
A Democrat of the House of Representatives who ranted on defending democracy on the anniversary of the Capitol disturbance of January 6 faces a reprimand after allegedly trying to deceive in the elections of a party.
The representative Adriano Espaillat can be suspended or simply expelled from the Democratic Party of Manhattan on Wednesday after an ethics investigation discovered that he and three cronies participated in “misconduct” in a 2023 vote for the president, the second high in the party.
The Espaillat assemblyman supported Harvey Epstein for the role, while the congressman’s rival, the leader of the Manhattan Democratic Party, Keith Wright, backed Nico Minerva, who won the position to Easy after an Oct. 5, 2023 Election of the Party Committee.
But Espaillat and two leaders of the 72nd district of the Assembly, Manny de los Santos, Maria Morillo and Mariel de la Cruz, did not report 23 votes for Minerva on their grass.
“The leaders of the Adriano Espaillat district, Manny de los Santos, Maria Morillo and Mariel de la Cruz violated multiple provisions of the rules of the Democratic Party of the New York County through the manipulation of votes, inappropriate registration procedures, intimidation tactics, incorrect filling of vacancies and obstruction of responsibility mechanisms”, a report by the internal ethics committee concluded.
The Ethics Report recognized the claims of Espaillat and the allies who were administrative errors by the leadership of the party that made the elections, but the investigation concluded that it did not absorb their misconduct.
The Executive Committee of the party will vote on whether accepting the findings of the ethics report and punishing Espaillat taking one of its three recommended actions, including the prohibition that he and his allies have a party position again, suspending them for 10 years or adding two district leader seats at 72 years.
It is unlikely that a suspension or expulsion, the sources told the publication, and party experts could also choose to issue a public reprimand.
“Will there be responsibility or not? I hope we are the party that follows the rules,” said party secretary, Barry Weinberg.
Weinberg accused Espaillat and his allies of participating in “suppression of shameless and shameless voters.”
Espaillat declined to make direct comments.
But the leader of the Harlem party district, Corey Ortega, a coalition spokesman for the New York County Reform backed by Espaillat, responded on the behavior of the congressman and said that the investigation of ethics was a WrightTight with the engine of the Canguro Court.
“Keith Wright’s actions represent a shameless political purge, putting together the democratic machine to silence the leaders of the Latin district who disagree with him and the canoe through a democratic process,” Ortega said.
“The history of Wright reflects a consistent pattern of exclusion and retaliation. Such non -stitucional attacks can be adjusted to the Trump administration, but they certainly have no place in the Democratic Party of our city.”
Hey also said that two of the five members of the Ethics Committee do not agree with the conclusions of the report.
But even those two members of the committee, Vanessa Aronson and Gabriel Panek, agreed with the majority that Espaillat and their allies involved in some misconduct and should face “consequences.”
The duo recommended a vote on whether criminals rebuke.
For a long time there has been tension over low heat between Espaillat and Wright.
Espaillat defeated Wright in the Democratic primaries to replace Charlie Rangel in 2016 in a new North-Manhattan/Bronx district that was once predominantly a black district and now has a Latin majority.
Congresman’s electoral problems occur after he criticized President Trump’s supporters for participating in a violent disturbance in the Capitol on January 6, 2021 to challenge the victory of former President Joe Biden over his candidate.
“Today, we think about reflecting on the violent attack that occurred in the United States Capitol four years ago as part of an organized attempt to stop the peaceful transfer of power,” said Espaillat in the four years of the Capitol’s disturbance.
“We recommend our efforts to protect and defend our democracy to defend those who would undermine or end it,” he said.

