Sex Scandal BOMBSHELL: Congress Faces Unprecedented Exposures

Rep. Anna Paulina Luna warns Capitol Hill faces a major “purge” with at least three more members—two from the House and one Senator—set for exposure over sexual misconduct and financial scandals, exposing deep corruption among elites.

Story Highlights

  • Rep. Luna (R-FL) predicts ongoing purge after filing motion to expel Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-CA) amid rape allegations and staff support for his ouster.
  • House Oversight Committee subpoenas $18 million congressional “slush fund” data on taxpayer-funded harassment settlements, release expected by April 21, 2026.
  • Recent resignations like Rep. U Gonzalez signal accelerating accountability; Luna anticipates most expulsions in a century.
  • Purge echoes 2018 #MeToo reforms, driven by verifiable evidence amid midterm pressures and bipartisan unease with government corruption.

Luna Launches Accountability Offensive

Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL) detailed the Capitol Hill purge during her April 16, 2026, interview on “Straight to the Point” with LATMG. She described an ongoing cleanup targeting members for sexual misconduct, financial impropriety, and scandals. Luna filed a motion to expel Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-CA) after five women came forward, including a California accuser alleging rape and drugging. Swalwell’s own Chief of Staff reportedly supports the expulsion. This action triggered a chain reaction, with Luna predicting two more House members and one Senator face exposure based on evidence.

Slush Fund Scrutiny Intensifies

House Oversight Committee subpoenaed records of an $18 million taxpayer-funded “slush fund” used for sexual harassment settlements. Data from 2018 payouts is due for release around April 21, 2026. In 2018, 75% of Congress voted against exposing these settlements, shielding misconduct. Luna frames this as “taking out the trash,” linking it to broader anti-corruption efforts like insider trading bans. Taxpayers have long subsidized elite cover-ups, eroding trust in a government prioritizing self-preservation over public service.

Recent high-profile resignations, including Rep. U Gonzalez, underscore the purge’s momentum. Luna confirmed ethics probes into at least one Democratic Senator. She anticipates up to four expulsions—the most in a century—disrupting House operations and forcing special elections before midterms.

Historical Echoes and Bipartisan Frustrations

The current developments mirror the 2018 #MeToo wave, which prompted resignations and House rule changes on harassment reporting. Luna emphasizes verifiable evidence over rumors, distinguishing this from past scandals. Both conservatives and liberals share outrage over a “deep state” of corrupt elites more focused on reelection than solving economic woes like inflation and immigration. This purge advances accountability, potentially reforming ethics rules and ending slush fund abuse.

GOP control of Congress under President Trump’s second term provides leverage for these reforms. Democrats face vulnerability pre-midterms, as exposures highlight fiscal mismanagement and moral failures. Voters on both sides demand transparency, rejecting the status quo that blocks the American Dream through government overreach and corruption.

Sources:

Grabien clip of Luna’s statements