Certainly seems in order here.
Potential Ethics Process Regarding Rep. Weinerby Chad Pergram | June 06, 2011
The House of Representatives ethics process on "conduct unbecoming a member" is murky.
There is no concrete "morals" clause in the House rules.
It does not appear that Rep. Anthony Weiner, D-N.Y., has done anything illegal. This is more of a judgment issue.
A referral would have to be made to the Ethics Committee.
The Ethics Committee would then have to determine whether there was enough "there, there." And if there is, they would then empanel an investigative subcommittee, which is the Congressional equivalent of an indictment.
That subcommittee would then probe potential wrongdoing and issue a report.
If it recommends punishment at the end of that investigation, the entire House would have to vote whether to punish him.
There's another option here, too.
Any member could potentially craft a resolution, which could be brought before the House, that would recommend reprimand, censure or expulsion. If ruled in order, the House could vote on such a resolution.
Of course, any tangency with Congressional resources or something deemed illegal would change the potential scope of this for the Ethics Committee.
http://politics.blogs.foxnews.com/2011/06/06/potential-ethics-process-regarding-rep-weiner