This common-sense legislation puts America first. For too long, we've allowed foreign-born individuals—some with divided loyalties—to hold the highest offices in our government. Our Founders never intended for Congress to be a training ground for globalist agendas. Requiring native-born citizenship ensures that those who make our laws have an unbreakable bond to this nation from birth.
The Constitution already demands natural-born citizenship for the presidency—why should Congress get a pass? Jim Jordan's bill closes that loophole and protects our sovereignty. No more career politicians whose first allegiance might be to another country. Time to restore trust in our institutions and put American citizens back in charge of America's future.
Who's with me? Raise your hand and let's make this happen!
The image pairs Rep. Jim Jordan and Trump at a rally with a headline that reads like a call-and-response chant: require “American-Born” legislators. The Constitution already requires natural-born status for president; for House and Senate, it sets a citizenship duration (7 and 9 years) and allows naturalized citizens to serve — and more than 10 lawmakers have been foreign-born. There is a real House bill — H.R.1948, the Protecting Our Legislative and Executive Spaces Act — that would bar Congress from employing non-citizens and impose natural-born requirements for congressional roles, but it hasn’t become law and it draws immediate constitutional and political objections. The meme’s headline stretches that proposal into “Jim Jordan’s Bill,” which simplifies sponsorship and status.
Jordan, as Judiciary Chair, drives hard-line citizenship and immigration messaging, so the attribution feels plausible to his base even if the photo is generic and the bill’s path is uncertain. The trick here is the prompt: “RAISE YOUR HAND” turns a contested rule change into a loyalty test, backed by Trump’s presence. The picture is authentic; the proposal exists but is not current operative law; the headline flattens a complex, likely unconstitutional change into applause bait.

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