Depends what they have on him. It was an easy process when NBA ousted Sterling which he resisted initially until the vote came which in NFL only takes 75% of the owners I believe .
The league might even assist in finding a buyer. Which they’d have to approve of course.
The fact Debartolo could have returned to the 49er after his punishment mean the NFL has NEVER forced an owner to sell their team. I'm not sure Snyder's issues are strong enough for a court battle. They have already punished him for workplace issues and financial improprieties are just allegations, nothing is proven.
All I could find....
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Snyder
Workplace culture[edit]
In July 2020,
The Washington Post published a series of articles alleging that over 40 women who were former employees of the organization, including office workers and cheerleaders, had been
sexually harassed and discriminated against by Snyder and other male executives, colleagues, and players of the team since at least 2006.
[58][59] That December, it was also reported that Snyder had settled a sexual harassment claim with a former female employee for a sum of $1.6 million. The alleged incident had occurred on his private plane while returning from the
Academy of Country Music Awards in 2009. Two private investigations at the time, by the team and an outside law firm, failed to substantiate the woman's claim, with it being reported that Snyder paid the sum to avoid any negative publicity.
[60]
A year-long independent investigation into the team's
workplace culture, led by lawyer
Beth Wilkinson, was concluded in July 2021.
[61][62] It found that incidents of sexual harassment, bullying, and intimidation were commonplace throughout the organization under his ownership.
[62] The NFL fined the team $10 million in response, with Snyder also voluntarily stepping down from running the team's day-to-day operations for a few months, giving those responsibilities to his wife Tanya.
[62] On July 28, 2022, Snyder voluntarily testified before the
United States House Committee on Oversight and Reform regarding its own investigation on Washington's history of workplace misconduct.
[63][64]
Financial improprieties[edit]
In March 2021, reports surfaced that Snyder may have intentionally under reported ticket sales to the NFL and
IRS in order to pay a smaller share into the NFL's Visiting Team Fund, allowing him to keep more of the ticket revenue than he otherwise would. On April 12, 2022, the
House Oversight Committee sent a letter to the
Federal Trade Commission alleging Snyder had been keeping two separate financial ledgers since at least 2012: one that he would submit to the NFL and one that showed the actual numbers, which were much different. Congress also alleged that Snyder would drive up prices by selling cheaper tickets in bulk to third party vendors, causing the remaining tickets to become far more expensive. This would in turn force fans who wanted to attend games at
Fedex Field to either join an expensive waiting list or buy expensive tickets.
[65]