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Republican strategist Roger Stone suggested a “bombshell” report about Representative Cory Mills, a Florida Republican, was forthcoming while invoking a comparison to former Representative Eric Swalwell, a CaliforniaDemocrat, in a post on X on Sunday.

“Bombshell Report on Rep. Cory Mills to be released Monday, Cory Mills makes Eric Swallwell [sic] look like Mother Teresa,” Stone, a longtime GOP strategist and ally of President Donald Trump, wrote on X. “House Republicans must expel this degenerate.”

It’s currently unknown what report Stone is referring to in his social media post.

Newsweek reached out to Mills and Stone’s publicist by email on Sunday for comment.

Why It Matters

Mills is facing renewed scrutiny over sexual misconduct accusations as similar scandals led Swalwell and Representative Tony Gonzales, a Texas Republican, to resign last week. While Mills has described comparisons with the other lawmakers as unfair, some on Capitol Hill are calling for him to resign, which could further erode the GOP’s slim majority in the House.

If Mills, who has served Florida’s 7th Congressional District since 2023, is removed from Congress or resigns, it may affect the Republican Party ahead of November’s midterm elections, in which they hope to protect their narrow majority.

Mills, however, has resisted calls to step down and has argued he’s being unfairly grouped with lawmakers accused of sexual relationships with staffers, something he denies.

House Republican leaders have said they are awaiting the outcome of an active Ethics Committee investigation into the congressman before considering disciplinary action.

What To Know

Stone’s warning comes as Mills is already under scrutiny following renewed attention to past allegations—including a resurfaced police report and 911 call first detailed by Newsweek.

Mills was investigated in February 2025 after a woman told police he had assaulted her during an argument at his Washington, D.C., residence. Mills and the woman later denied that a physical altercation occurred, and prosecutors declined to bring charges.

In November, the House Ethics Committee launched an investigation into Mills’ conduct over allegations of failing to properly disclose required information on statements filed with the House; violating campaign finance laws and regulations in connection with his 2022 and 2024 campaigns; improperly soliciting and/or receiving gifts; receiving special favors by virtue of his position; engaging in misconduct with respect to allegations of sexual misconduct and/or dating violence; and/or misusing congressional resources or status.

In October, a Florida judge issued a restraining order against Mills for “protection against dating violence” after his ex-girlfriend accused him of harassment, saying he threatened to blackmail her using nude images and videos.

Mills has said the allegations stem from “a bad breakup,” emphasized he has never been arrested, and argued he’s being targeted for political reasons.

What Was Swalwell Accused of?

Swalwell, who was running for California governor, resigned from Congress following multiple claims of sexual misconduct last week.

A former Swalwell staffer alleged two non‑consensual encounters—one in 2019 and another in 2024—and told investigators she was too intoxicated to consent during the latter incident. Another woman, who appeared publicly with attorney Lisa Bloom, accused the former congressman of drugging and assaulting her in a hotel room in 2018.

Swalwell, 45, declined to comment when reached via phone Tuesday afternoon. “I have no comment on anything—period—and I’m going to hang up now,” he told Newsweek during a brief interview.

Swalwell has denied all accusations of sexual misconduct, posting on social media, “I will fight the serious false allegation made against me.”

How Do Members Get Expelled?

House members can bring privileged resolutions to censure or expel colleagues, which forces action within two legislative days, potentially upending leadership’s control of the floor.

Past practice included delaying action until after Ethics investigations conclude, as in the case of former Representative George Santos, a New York Republican, who was expelled only after the committee released findings.

Under Article I, Section 5 of the U.S. Constitution, “Each House may…with the Concurrence of two thirds, expel a Member,” setting a high bar for removal.

By Newsweek – https://www.newsweek.com/roger-stone-warns-republican-makes-eric-swalwell-look-like-mother-theresa-11850663

President Trump has the moment.

Right now, MAGA is undergoing turbulence at the most opportune time for Democrats and the enemies of America heading into the midterms. Much of the animus is being caused by different personalities on X airing their constant grievances, feuding with each other and attempting to draw others into their personal animus with disastrous results. It is a shame to see and could have dire effects on the midterms.

Meanwhile, patriots in the grassroots across the country remain in the trenches fighting on the issues that matter most for freedom, particularly the freedom for our most vulnerable. This is no more evident than in the movement for health freedom. Over one in four American children now live with a chronic illness. Autism rates have skyrocketed. President Trump has repeatedly called the spike in autism diagnoses among the most alarming developments in history.

The path to unity will not be easy, but it can begin by tackling this important issue that unites conservatives of all stripes, independents and even some liberals. This starts by securing a concrete reform to secure the right of parents to protect their children, the duty of government to deliver justice when that protection fails, and the refusal to let any industry write its own blank check at the expense of American families.

The 1986 National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act was supposed to be a grand bargain. In exchange for shielding pharmaceutical companies from ruinous lawsuits—so that vaccines could reach every child—Congress created the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program, a no-fault court that promised swift, fair compensation for the devastating injuries that do occur from the administering of vaccines.

Critics warned that the limited-liability courts, even if well intentioned, would eventually be abused. By the late 1990s, their worst fears came to pass as CDC scientist Thomas Verstraeten’s early data suggested a possible link between certain vaccine schedules and neurological harm. After those findings were quietly reworked, encephalopathy and seizure disorder were quietly removed from the injury compensation table. The very conditions that could explain a post-vaccination autism diagnosis were erased from the list of compensable injuries.

The timing was not lost on parents. The first high-profile compensations—most famously the 2008 Hannah Poling case, in which the government conceded that vaccines had worsened a mitochondrial disorder leading to autism-like regression—exposed the loophole. Rather than expand accountability, federal officials on the Big Pharma dole narrowed it significantly. The results were catastrophic for families nationwide.

Parents who watched their healthy toddlers seize and regress into autism after routine shots suddenly found the courthouse door bolted. The diagnosis of “autism” itself was carved out of the table, even when the clinical picture was textbook encephalopathy—a disease that causes brain dysfunction. These children became victims of America’s corporate-driven public health regime, being denied the benefits promised to every other injured American as vaccines became the new religion—which became undeniable during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Restoring encephalopathy and seizure disorder to the table would strengthen the 1986 Act and restore it to its initial intent. It simply protects the program and would compensate the injured. A child who receives an autism diagnosis shortly after vaccination would once again be allowed to present evidence that the vaccine triggered the encephalopathy or seizures that produced the regression. Parents would have the right to challenge the diagnosis in vaccine court—the same right every other injured party enjoys. The change is narrow, targeted, and long overdue.

This single reform delivers a 360-degree victory for the America First agenda. First, it puts children first—exactly where President Trump has said they belong. Second, it delivers an immediate, tangible win for the Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) wing of the movement. RFK Jr.’s supporters have long demanded accountability without destroying vaccine access; this reform gives them that victory while keeping the liability shield intact. Third, it repairs the credibility of the 1986 Act itself. This is credibility that the public health regime desperately needs as an increasing number of parents now understandably distrust all vaccines and pharma products, which should be tools to alleviate disease and suffering.

Critics will inevitably call this reform “anti-vaccine.” That is a blatant falsehood. The reform does not question the overall benefit of vaccines. It simply acknowledges the biological reality that vaccines can ignite catastrophic injury. We do not ban cars because some people die in wrecks; we build airbags and seat-belt laws. We do not defund the military because friendly-fire tragedies happen; we honor the wounded and make sure those instances are less likely to happen in the future. The same moral logic applies here. The children who regress after vaccination are not collateral damage to be ignored. They are our children. Their parents are not conspiracy theorists; they are patriots demanding accountability from a bureaucracy that has proven itself to be cold and soulless.

Restoring the two diagnoses to the table is politically unifying because it is morally unifying. It tells every MAGA parent—urban or rural, college-educated or not—that this movement places their child’s neurological health above any industry’s profits. It tells the hesitant that health freedom is about eliminating vaccines; it is about ensuring there are no more hidden injuries, no more erased data, no more closed courthouse doors. It shows the pharmaceutical industry that the 1986 Act will no longer be abused, and their lobbyist influence can no longer rig the system.

President Trump has the moment. The Republican majorities are in place. The public is hungry for results that directly affect their lives. By directing HHS and the vaccine court to reinstate encephalopathy and seizure disorder on the injury table, President Trump can deliver perhaps the most unifying policy victory of his second term. He will protect the vaccine program, compensate the injured, restore parental trust, and give every MAGA patriot a victory they can explain to their neighbors by simply telling them: “We put your kids first.” This reform is simple. The politics are unifying. The principle is health freedom. The time is now.

His fall was inevitable because vanity is brittle.

If ambition could be decanted in a laboratory flask, aerated with vanity, sprayed with hair product, and marched directly from student government into a television studio, the result would look very much like Eric Swalwell. Born in Sac City, Iowa, and raised in Dublin, California, Swalwell was the son of a police officer and grew up in a household that seems to have prized order, respectability, advancement, and the polished appearances of upward mobility. He played sports, pursued the usual credentials, studied law, and followed that now drearily familiar route by which modern mediocrities are transformed into public men. Student government. Local office. Prosecutor’s résumé. Camera ready presentation. Poll tested indignation. He did not enter public life with the gravitas of a statesman, the scars of a soldier, the daring of an entrepreneur, or the intellectual distinction of a serious thinker. He arrived as something more synthetic, more curated, more focus grouped. He looked less like a leader than like a prototype assembled by consultants for the age of cable news.

Swalwell first entered politics through the Dublin City Council, a suitably modest launching pad for a career that would later become a monument to immodesty. In 2012 he challenged veteran Democratic Congressman Fortney Pete Stark, one of the more eccentric and abrasive old bulls of the House. Stark was not always graceful, but he was unmistakably real. He was cantankerous, unvarnished, often undisciplined, and entirely himself. Swalwell, by contrast, was the fresh packaging, the youthful substitute, the glossy showroom model rolled forward for voters eager to confuse youth with virtue and polish with depth. In an era already infatuated with optics over substance, the new package beat the old original. That was the beginning of Eric Swalwell’s ascent, and it was also, in retrospect, the first act in a political comedy of hypocrisy so broad that even Aristophanes might have rejected it as implausible.

Swalwell did not merely run against Pete Stark. He attacked Stark on residency grounds. He made an issue of whether Stark truly lived in the district, whether he genuinely maintained a domicile there, whether he authentically belonged among the people he purported to represent. Swalwell wrapped himself in the language of local rootedness and territorial legitimacy. He presented himself as the man who actually lived there, actually belonged there, and actually represented the district not merely by legal technicality but by physical and civic presence. It was an effective line of attack. It helped propel him to victory. It gave him the moral posture of reform and the tactical advantage of indignation. But politics has a wicked sense of humor, and it often reserves its cruelest punch lines for those who declaim most piously.

Years later, extensive coverage erupted over Swalwell’s own domicile, his own residency, his own connection to California, and his own mortgage documents tied to Washington. The very cudgel he once used against Pete Stark came flying back toward his own forehead.

That irony is too rich to pass over quickly, because it says almost everything one needs to know about the man. When Swalwell sought the governorship of California, his eligibility became the subject of scrutiny and challenge amid allegations that he did not in fact maintain the sort of California domicile the office required. Questions swirled around his life in Washington, his use of a District of Columbia residence, and mortgage paperwork that reportedly described him as a DC resident. His candidacy was formally challenged on residency grounds and yet was ultimately allowed to proceed. The courts may have kept him on the ballot, but a legal ruling does not erase a political humiliation. The spectacle remained devastating. The man who rose in part by attacking Pete Stark for not truly living in the district found himself defending his own ties to the state he wished to govern. That is not a mere inconsistency. That is a farce of almost Shakespearean symmetry, with the added vulgarity of mortgage documents.

Once installed in Congress, Swalwell discovered the great secret of modern political advancement. Policy is slow. Governing is tedious. Legislative craftsmanship is obscure. But television rewards preening instantly. Cable news became his natural habitat because it rewarded not wisdom but performance, not seriousness but volume, not discernment but insinuation. Why labor over complex legislation when one can rush before a camera, arrange one’s face into theatrical alarm, and accuse one’s enemies of treachery? Swalwell became one of the most tedious fixtures of the anti Trump pageant, a man perpetually available for outrage, forever sprinting toward the nearest microphone with the urgency of a courtier desperate not to miss the royal banquet. He repeatedly insinuated that Donald Trump, Trump’s associates, and yes, yours truly, were compromised by Russia. He trafficked in the suggestion that I was a Russian asset, which was not merely false but ludicrous, the sort of smear that only a political culture marinated in hysteria could entertain for even a moment. He delivered such accusations with the smug assurance of a man who knew the press would applaud the charge and never demand the proof.

Then came Christine Fang, also known as Fang Fang, and with her one of the most delicious reversals in recent American political life. Axios reported that a suspected Chinese intelligence operative cultivated relationships with local and national politicians in California between 2011 and 2015, and that Swalwell was among those in her orbit. Fang fundraised, networked, attended events, and sought proximity to rising political figures. Swalwell later said he was shocked when the FBI briefed him and that he cut off contact. He has not been charged with wrongdoing in that matter. Fine. Let that be noted. But let the more important political truth be noted as well. The same man who had spent years clanging the bells of foreign compromise, flinging around accusations of Russian influence like confetti at a parade, found his own political circle penetrated by a suspected Chinese operative. One could scarcely write a more savage irony if one were drafting a political farce for the stage. The self appointed bloodhound of foreign infiltration became the butt of a scandal involving an alleged Chinese communist asset. Hypocrisy in Washington is common. On rare occasions it ripens into high art. This was one of those occasions.

Still, Washington protected him. That is one of the capital’s oldest habits. If a public figure remains useful to the correct faction, his embarrassments are softened, his scandals contextualized, his contradictions explained away as misunderstandings, and his humiliations padded with euphemism. Swalwell remained useful. He was a dependable anti Trump voice. He was photogenic enough for television. He was belligerent enough for partisan warfare. He had the dead eyed confidence of a man who mistakes a green room for a moral calling. So the press cushioned him. The party tolerated him. The machine kept turning. He continued his cable appearances, his solemn monologues, his prepackaged fury, his lectures on national security and civic decency, as if the Fang episode had not already made a mockery of his most cherished public persona.

But character has a way of collecting debts, and in time those debts come due with interest. The event that finally brought Eric Swalwell down was not the Fang scandal, not the residency embarrassment, and not his long record of sanctimony. It was the eruption of serious allegations of sexual misconduct and sexual assault during his gubernatorial campaign in 2026. According to reports cited by the Associated Press and Reuters, a former staffer accused Swalwell of sexually assaulting her on two occasions, including one alleged incident in a New York hotel in 2024 when she said she was too intoxicated to consent. CNN also reported additional allegations from other women, including claims involving unsolicited explicit messages or photos and other inappropriate conduct. Swalwell denied the most serious accusations. Reuters reported that he called them “absolutely false.” He also publicly acknowledged what he called “mistakes in judgment.” But by then the political avalanche had already begun.

This, then, is the point that cannot be blurred, softened, or passed over with vague euphemism. What brought Swalwell down was a cascading scandal of sexual misconduct allegations that detonated while he was running for governor of California. The allegations did not remain abstract whispers. They triggered concrete consequences. The Manhattan District Attorney’s (DA) office opened an investigation into one of the alleged assaults. The House Ethics Committee opened a probe as well. Democratic allies who had once praised his brilliance and future suddenly discovered the exquisite moral usefulness of distance. Endorsements vanished. Campaign chairs resigned. Support within the party collapsed with shocking speed. Adam Schiff withdrew his endorsement. Nancy Pelosi and other prominent Democrats urged that the matter be taken seriously. Over fifty former staffers reportedly called for his resignation. The same political class that had once treated Swalwell as a youthful lion of the resistance began to treat him as if he were radioactive waste in a tailored suit.

Swalwell first insisted he would stay in the race. Then he suspended his gubernatorial campaign. The Associated Press and Reuters both reported that he stepped back from the California race as the allegations mounted and as support evaporated around him. The San Francisco Chronicle reported that, because of filing deadlines, his name would still appear on the ballot even after his campaign ended. That is a fitting final indignity for a politician who spent so much of his life worshipping image. Even in withdrawal, the ghost of the candidacy lingered there on the ballot, a spectral reminder of an ambition that had outrun its own moral scaffolding.

Then came the final collapse. On April 13, 2026, Swalwell announced that he would resign from Congress. The Associated Press reported that his resignation came amid mounting pressure, after the House Ethics Committee opened its probe and after bipartisan calls for his departure intensified. Reuters likewise reported that he chose to quit under the weight of the allegations and the political turmoil they had unleashed. So let there be no ambiguity. He did not simply endure an embarrassing news cycle. He did not merely lose a few endorsements. He did not only suspend a campaign. He resigned from Congress itself after the allegations, after the investigation, after the withdrawal of support, after the moral posturing had finally boomeranged into personal catastrophe.

There is a grim and almost mathematical beauty in the pattern. Eric Swalwell accused others of foreign compromise while his own orbit was tainted by scandal involving a suspected Chinese operative. He climbed over Pete Stark by attacking questions of domicile and residence, only to face his own residency controversy when he sought the governorship. He built a career around accusation, innuendo, and televised moral superiority, only to find himself accused, investigated, abandoned, and finally toppled. He loved scrutiny when it was directed outward. He recoiled from it when it turned inward. He treated slander as a political instrument, mockery as an argument, and performance as substance. In the end, performance could not save him, cameras could not cleanse him, and the applause of partisans could not protect him.

Swalwell was never merely partisan. Many politicians are partisan. He was something more irritating and more revealing. He was smug. He was glib. He was one of those insufferable public men who mistake media validation for virtue and social media momentum for history’s blessing. He represented the worst habits of our degraded age, an age in which a man can become nationally famous not for building anything admirable, defending anything noble, or discovering anything true, but for appearing repeatedly on television with an expression of caffeinated moral alarm. He became a mascot for a whole class of ambitious mediocrities who rise not through greatness but through shamelessness, not through statesmanship but through a kind of lubricated opportunism that passes for sophistication among the permanently online and the permanently partisan.

And that is why his fall resonates beyond the man himself. The rise and fall of Eric Swalwell is not merely the story of one congressman brought low. It is the story of a political culture that manufactures these figures by the dozen, inflates them with media oxygen, armors them with partisan indulgence, and then feigns astonishment when they explode under pressure. He was an emissary of the age of insinuation. He was one of the little princes of the anti Trump circus. He made himself prosecutor, lecturer, inquisitor, and executioner. He repeatedly cast himself as the arbiter of who was compromised, who was indecent, who was dangerous, and who was disqualified from public life. Yet in the end, he became what he most relished making of others.

An exhibit.

A cautionary tale.

A man who attacked Pete Stark for not truly living in the district and then had to defend his own domicile.

A man who denounced foreign compromise while living under the long shadow of Fang Fang.

A man who built his public identity on accusation and then found himself cornered by allegations he could not politically survive.

A man inflated by cameras and punctured by facts.

His rise was swift because the age was shallow.

His fall was inevitable because vanity is brittle.

The spotlights dimmed. The applause ceased. The cultivated smirk that once flashed so confidently across television panels now survives only as a relic of a political career undone by its own contradictions. Eric Swalwell wanted to be prosecutor, moral lecturer, and executioner of his enemies. Instead, history has reduced him to something much smaller and much sadder. He became the defendant in the court of public contempt.

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Former Senate Relations Committee Member Robert Torricelli joins The Roger Stone Show — today, on 77WABC Radio. LISTEN LIVE 3:30 PM ET: http://WABCRadio.com

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ROGER STONE MEDIA

WHO IS ROGER STONE?

Roger Stone is a seasoned political operative, speaker, pundit, and New York Times Bestselling Author featured in the Netflix documentary Get Me Roger Stone.

Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and Donald Trump—all of these Presidents relied on Roger Stone to secure their seat in the Oval Office. In a 45-year career in American politics, Stone has worked on over 700 campaigns for public office.

“Roger’s a good guy. He is a patriot and believes in a strong nation, and a lot of other things I believes in.”

– President Donald J. Trump
Stone’s bestselling books include The Man Who Killed Kennedy: The Case Against LBJThe Bush Crime FamilyThe Clintons’ War on WomenThe Making of The President—How Donald Trump Orchestrated a Revolution, and Stone’s Rules with a forward by Tucker Carlson.
For the last 15 years, Roger Stone has published his International Best & Worst Dressed List. Stone is considered an authority on political and corporate strategy, branding, marketing, messaging, and advertising.
Stone is the host of The StoneZONE on Rumble and is also the host of The Roger Stone Show on WABC Radio.

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