House lawmakers clamoring for ethics reforms after wave of resignations
Source: The Hill
04/23/26 6:00 AM ET
The surge of House resignations this month has triggered calls from both parties for a broader overhaul of the ethics process and how the chamber polices its own.
While many lawmakers have welcomed the hasty departures of former Reps. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.), Tony Gonzales (R-Texas) and Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick (D-Fla.), their cases have also stirred up plenty of frustrations about Congresss internal handling of allegations of misconduct and the pace of the Ethics Committees subsequent investigations.
Those frustrations are now morphing into specific calls to revamp the ethics process, with leaders in both parties joining the growing chorus of lawmakers eyeing ways to improve the chambers oversight machinery, particularly when it comes to empowering women to report allegations of sexual misconduct.
We are looking at every potential avenue to tighten up the rules and make sure that women have an avenue to report, Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) told reporters this week. We have to protect women and anyone who feels like theres any inappropriate behavior whatsoever. So if there are ways to tighten the rules, suggestions, were seeking that from all members. I suspect you get bipartisan, almost unanimous, support to do that.
Read more: https://thehill.com/homenews/house/5844005-house-ethics-reforms-resignations/
We have to protect women and anyone who feels like theres any inappropriate behavior whatsoever.

Threatening one's position, random groping, and any innuendo, "excepted".