Washington is finally waking up to something most Americans have been screaming about for years — Democrat Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick allegedly stole $5 million in FEMA disaster relief money, and she’s still sitting in Congress casting votes.

Not for much longer, if House Speaker Mike Johnson has anything to say about it.

On Tuesday, Johnson told reporters something you almost never hear a sitting Speaker say about a fellow House member: the facts are in, the Ethics Committee has spoken, and the Florida Democrat “should be expelled.”

The House Ethics Committee ran a years-long, bipartisan investigation. They interviewed hundreds of people. They reviewed tens of thousands of documents. And in the end, the panel found Cherfilus-McCormick guilty of 25 out of 27 ethics violations.

Even AOC is reportedly on board with expelling her. When AOC agrees with Mike Johnson about tossing a Democrat from Congress, you know the evidence has to be pretty damning.

House Speaker Johnson (R-La.) said he thinks the House will agree that Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick (D-Fla.) should be expelled from Congress.

A House Ethics subcommittee last month announced that the panel had proven 25 of 27 counts of ethics violations against Cherfilus-McCormick, who is under federal indictment over allegations she stole $5 million from FEMA disaster funds for personal use. The committee has scheduled a hearing on April 21 to determine appropriate sanctions. She has denied wrongdoing.

“I have been a zealous guardian of due process around here,” Johnson told reporters on Tuesday. “I do think certainly on Cherfilus-McCormick, the Ethics Committee has gone through all of its processes, and they found some alarming facts. I think the facts are indisputable at this point, and so I believe it’ll be the consensus of this body that she should be expelled.”

The specific allegations include using the stolen funds to fund her congressional campaign and purchase luxury items. Rep. Greg Steube (R-Fla.) has pledged to introduce an expulsion resolution but said he would wait for the ethics panel’s recommended punishment, which is set for release at the April 21 hearing.