The Republican representative, Madison Cawthorn has exposed US elites with his stories about encounters he has had since arriving in Washington. One of these stories comprised of lawmakers inviting him to a sexual orgy. He also added that they did cocaine in front of him.

Representative Madison Cawthorn, a Republican from North Carolina, revealed in a recent interview that officials in Washington, DC, whom he âlooked up toâ asked him to a âorgyâ and used cocaine in front of him.
Cawthorn, 26, is a freshman representative and the youngest member of the House of Representatives. Throughout his time representing the citizens of North Carolina, he has been chastised by both Democrats and Republicans for a few of his contentious opinions. During an appearance with Warrior Poet Society host John Lovell on Thursday, the ardent fan of former President Donald Trump made the comments regarding the âorgyâ and drug usage.
Lovell inquired about the congressmanâs thoughts on the acclaimed Netflix series House of Cards, which aired for six seasons from 2013 to 2018 and featured Kevin Spacey and Robin Wright. The fictional drama followed a corrupted politician and his spouse as they coerced and scraped their way to increasing levels of authority in the nationâs capital. Lovell questioned him about if the program is an accurate depiction of DCâs operations.
âI heard a former president that we had in the â90s was asked a question about this. And he gave an answer that I thought was so true. He said that the only thing not accurate in that showâthat you could never get a piece of legislation about education passed that quickly,â Cawthorn responded.

The Republican representative went on to tell stories about encounters he has had since arriving in Washington.
âThe sexual perversion that goes on in Washington, I mean, being kind of a young guy in Washington, average age is probably 60 or 70,â Cawthorn said, âI look at a lot of these people, a lot of them that Iâve looked up to through my lifeâIâve always paid attention to politicsâthen all of a sudden you get invited to, âOh hey weâre going to have a sexual get together at one of our homes, you should come.’â
Cawthorn immediately responded with a horrified expression, adding, ââWhat did you just ask me to come to?â And then you realize theyâre asking you to come to an orgy.â Â âSome of the people who are leading on the movement to try and remove addiction in our countyâ had taken âa key bump of cocaineâ directly in front of him, according to the Republican lawmaker.
The North Carolina representative did not identify any of the people involved in the interactions, nor did he say whether they were with elected members of Congress or other DC officials and aides. For more information, Newsweek contacted Cawthornâs press secretary, but did not receive a response right away.
Cawthornâs mention of a past president discussing House of Cards seems to be a reference to a 2015 interview Spacey gave to Gotham Magazine. At the time, the actor said that he and former President Bill Clinton, a Democrat, were buddies and that they had played poker together. Clinton informed Spacey that the show was mostly authentic and that he appreciated it.
âKevin, 99 percent of what you do on that show is real. The 1 percent you get wrong is you could never get an education bill passed that fast,â Clinton told Spacey, according to the actorâs comments to the magazine.
Cawthorn has received a lot of criticism for comments he made against Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and the Ukrainian administration. He labeled Zelensky a âthugâ and his administration âincredibly evilâ at a rally in North Carolina earlier in the month, just after Russian President Vladimir Putin commenced a complete special military operation on the country.
Cawthorn has been branded a part of the âPutin wing of the GOP.â by Wyoming Republican Representative Liz Cheney. Illinois Republican Congressman Adam Kinzinger chastised him for âechoing Putin propaganda.â
Cawthorn was âwrong.â according to House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, a California Republican.
On March 18, he declared, âMadison is wrong,â âIf thereâs any thug in this world itâs [Vladimir] Putin.â He also told journalists that he had discussed the contentious statements with the Republican lawmaker.
Cawthorn took to Twitter when footage of his words about Ukraine went viral, and he harshly denounced Putin and Russiaâs operation. At the time, his press secretary, Luke Ball, told Newsweek that the representative âsupports Ukraine and the Ukrainian presidentâs efforts to defend their country against Russian aggression, but does not want America drawn into another conflict through emotional manipulation.â