Is George Santos married: George Santos, a Republican candidate for congress, is now the subject of increased scrutiny after a New York Times investigation earlier this week revealed a series of blatant outright lies at the core of some of the most basic facts about his life. However, that backstory may also be notable for what Santos left out—a publicly unrevealed marriage. As the first openly gay non-incumbent GOP candidate elected to Congress, Santos broke through barriers.

He believes he has “never faced discrimination in the Republican Party.” However, according to court documents from The Daily Beast, Santos appears to be the subject of an unrecognized divorce from a woman in Queens County, New York, that occurred in September 2019. His already tenuous biographical and political credentials are made more questionable by the divorce, which Santos has not publicly mentioned.

In response to criticism about his support for Florida’s so-called “Don’t Say, Gay Bill,” which Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis signed into law this year, Santos told USA Today in October: “I am openly gay, have never had an issue with my sexual identity in the past decade, and I can tell you and assure you, I will always be an advocate for LGBTQ folks.”

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After his divorce was finalized, Santos filed the necessary paperwork to begin his 2020 campaign less than two weeks later. Santos has kept his former marriage entirely out of the public eye, even though his 2022 campaign bio lists his husband, who, according to Santos, lives with him and their four dogs on Long Island.

Santos, who asserts that he has “never experienced discrimination in the Republican Party,” may have been living happily as an out gay guy for over a decade, as he claims.

Numerous explanations exist for why people get married. Santos’ predicament is peculiar, though, because he never told people about his divorce and never explained how his previous union with a woman—which ended just 12 days before he launched his first congressional campaign—could be reconciled with his claims of being an out homosexual Republican.

Santos, 34, lost his first attempt at running for Congress in 2020 to Rep. Tom Suozzi (D-NY), but he defeated Zimmerman this year. Santos, though, is already receiving calls for resignation. He might be the subject of an ethics probe due to a New York Times investigation that revealed he had fabricated significant portions of his resume.

The colleges Santos claims to have attended don’t have any information about him; neither do Citigroup or Goldman Sachs, where he claimed to have worked; the IRS has no record of his nonprofit; he still has “unresolved” legal issues in Brazil; his previous business ventures seem tenuous; even his address has been questioned.

Santos’ lawyer Joseph Murray, stated in response to the Times article that did not directly refute the allegations. Still, he painted his client as the victim because he “represents the kind of progress that the Left is so threatened by—a gay, Latino, immigrant, and Republican who resoundingly won a Biden district by demonstrating to regular voters that there is a better option than the broken promises and failed policies of the Democratic Party.”

The Times article sparked a furious backlash against the congressman-elect and Democratic opposition researchers, Republican vetters, and the media for failing to call attention to the now-obvious flaws in his story before the election.

The Times story inspired journalists and internet sleuths throughout the nation to delve deeper into Santos’ past—or what they could uncover of it—even if that information essentially went unreported during the campaign.

Santos’ alleged marriage and divorce are unknown, although they don’t seem to mesh with his present biography. According to his campaign bio, he resides on Long Island with his husband. He has previously informed American and Brazilian media that he was engaged to a man, a fellow Brazilian who Santos has characterized as a pharmacist.

(Neither a marriage record nor a public record of the man’s work in that profession could be located by The Daily Beast.) However, according to New York court records, George Devolder Santos, who also goes by the initial “A,” and Uadla Santos Vieira Santos divorced amicably in 2019.

Public records search only reveals one person in the US with that name. Calls and text message inquiries directed to phones connected to Uadla and George Santos went unanswered. (Sadly, Santos is the only buyer named on the property paperwork; the deed for a $750,000 house purchase in Union County, New Jersey, last June lists her as the buyer and notes that she is married.)

George Santos, whose middle name is Anthony, occasionally goes by Devolder, the maiden name of his late mother. It was a part of his “Devolder Santos for Congress” campaign and his fictitious financial services firm, the Devolder Organization.

Over the years, Santos has alternated between using these four names in different combinations, sometimes adopting his father’s last name Santos and other times using his mother’s last name Devolder. According to a crowdfunding effort, Santos ran online to raise money for “the expenditures of the wake,” his mother passed away in 2016.

The fundraising campaign is still active, and the GoFundMe website claims “Anthony D Santos” as the recipient and Anthony Devolver of Sunnyside, New York, as the organizer. Santos’ campaign biography page states that his mother was “the first female executive at a major financial institution,” although it doesn’t specify which one.

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The biography also says that on the morning of September 11, 2001, “George’s mother was in her office in the South Tower.” About 15 years later, “she survived the terrible events of that day, but sadly passed away a few years later.”

Even more, the mystery was added on Wednesday when the Jewish publication The Forward asserted that Santos might have been lying when he claimed Jewish lineage throughout the campaign, even on his website.

Hakeem Jeffries, the incoming House Minority Leader, referred to his future colleague as a “complete and utter phony” in response to the revelation. Santos’ reputation as a dynamic and culturally progressive character has been complicated by the divorce disclosure and the seeming secrecy surrounding it.

Santos made history as the first non-incumbent gay Republican ever to be elected to Congress during an election season in which many of his fellow conservatives spouted absurd accusations of paedophilia against Democrats, singled out friendly drag brunches as hubs for “grooming,” and inflamed a hateful anti-gay and anti-trans movement.

Attacks on the LGBTQ community also skyrocketed. But now that he has won, and with only two weeks until his ground-breaking inauguration, Santos’ relationship with the truth is being put to the test, something he managed to avoid during the previous two campaigns.

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Alta Militello

Writing and doing research are two activities that Alta Militello adores. Because she reads so much, she writes about topics such as history, culture, and current events. Alta worked in marketing after receiving her degree in business marketing, but she eventually left the field because she was unhappy there.

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