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JUST IN: Notorious Senator Blindsided By Federal Investigation

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Sen. Ruben Gallego is under federal investigation for suspected campaign finance violations, a new report said Monday, threatening to cast a fresh shadow over the Arizona Democrat’s political future as he eyes a possible 2028 White House run.

The Justice Department probe comes even after the Senate Ethics Committee closed its own inquiry into allegations of sexual misconduct and campaign finance violations.

According to a letter released by Gallego’s office Monday, the Senate panel found no evidence that the freshman senator violated Senate rules or applicable law.

But the congressional ethics process is separate from any federal criminal investigation.

Axios reported that the DOJ investigation stems from a “whistleblower complaint” out of Southern California, citing a source familiar with the probe.

The investigation follows scrutiny over Gallego’s campaign spending, including reporting from Politico that he used a political committee’s PAC to fund trips with his family to Miami, Chicago, Disneyland and Disney World.

Gallego’s team blasted the investigation as political retaliation from the Trump administration.

President Trump is targeting Senator Gallego while the most weaponized Department of Justice in history is turning a blind eye to Trump’s unprecedented corruption,” a Gallego spokesperson told Axios in a statement.

“It’s the least surprising news of the week that this comes immediately after the Senate Ethics Committee cleared Senator Gallego of right-wing smears pushed by the administration,” the spokesperson added.

The Justice Department declined to comment.

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The investigation could complicate Gallego’s attempt to build a national profile after winning his Senate seat and being floated as a potential Democratic presidential contender.

Earlier this month, Axios reported that Gallego had hired former Biden deputy press secretary Andrew Bates to focus on crisis communications.

That work reportedly included handling any dealings with the Senate ethics panel and fallout from Gallego’s friendship with former Rep. Eric Swalwell of California.

Swalwell resigned from Congress after four women accused him of sexual harassment, assault and rape.

Gallego has denied wrongdoing and has said the allegations against him are politically motivated.

The latest report lands at an awkward moment for the Arizona Democrat, who had just been pointing to the Senate Ethics Committee’s closure of its inquiry as vindication.

Now, instead of turning the page, Gallego faces a new and potentially more serious question: whether federal investigators believe his campaign money was used improperly.

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