Top Ad 728x90

lundi 13 avril 2026

AMERICA FIRST IN CONGRESS: Time to Question Foreign-Born Loyalty in Washington


 AMERICA FIRST IN CONGRESS: Time to Question Foreign-Born Loyalty in Washington



 The United States Capitol is supposed to represent AMERICAN interests — but more and more, we're seeing members of Congress whose loyalties and origins raise serious questions! 



Do you support removing members of Congress who are foreign-born? It is a question millions of Americans are asking right now, and for good reason.

The United States Constitution requires only that members of the House and Senate be U.S. citizens for 7 and 9 years respectively. It does not require them to be born here. But after years of watching elected officials side with foreign interests over American families, voters are demanding a higher standard: undivided loyalty to the United States of America.

The Problem Is Not Where You Were Born. It Is Where Your Allegiance Lies.
America is a nation of immigrants. Legal immigration built this country. The issue is not birthplace. The issue is what happens when members of Congress consistently vote, speak, and act against American interests while defending foreign governments, hostile ideologies, or open-border policies that undermine our sovereignty.

We have seen members of Congress:

Attack our closest ally while defending terrorist organizations that chant “Death to America.”
Push to defund ICE and Border Patrol while cartels flood our streets with fentanyl.
Boycott the State of the Union when a foreign leader speaks, then turn around and lobby for foreign aid to countries that hate us.
Refuse to condemn 9/11 as an act of terrorism, calling it “some people did something.”
When your loyalties are split, Americans pay the price.

The Constitution Is the Floor, Not the Ceiling
The Founders set minimum requirements in 1789. They never imagined a Congress where members would take the oath and then use their office to advance foreign agendas. James Madison warned that if the people become “unattached to the country,” the Republic cannot survive.

We cannot expel a member of Congress for being foreign-born. Article I, Section 5 says each House may expel a member with a 2/3 vote, but only for “disorderly behavior.” That is why this debate matters. Voters decide who represents them. And voters have every right to demand representatives whose first and only allegiance is to the United States.

This Is About Accountability, Not Ethnicity
Some will call this question racist. It is not. We have had foreign-born patriots who bled for this country. We have also had natural-born citizens who betrayed it. The question is simple: Do you put America first?

If you travel to Somalia and tell people you are “Somalia first,” you should not be in the U.S. Congress. If you lobby for Indian visa programs that undercut American workers while representing Michigan, your voters deserve to know. If you call America a “system of oppression” from the House floor, you should face your constituents.

The Solution Is at the Ballot Box
You do not need a constitutional amendment to fix this. You need primaries. You need voters who ask tough questions:

Who funds your campaigns?
Do you support BDS against Israel while demanding U.S. aid for Gaza?
Will you deport illegal aliens who assault police?
Do you believe in borders, citizenship, and assimilation?
If the answer is no, vote them out.

Real Leadership Means Real Loyalty
President Trump showed the world that peace comes through strength and strength starts with knowing who is on your side. The same principle applies in Congress. We cannot secure the border, rebuild our military, or restore American energy if we have representatives apologizing for America and excusing our enemies.

So do you support removing members of Congress who are foreign-born? The better question is this: Do you support removing any member of Congress, foreign-born or not, who refuses to put America first?

For millions of Americans, the answer is yes. The midterms are coming. Make them hear you.

America First. No Apologies. No Exceptions.


0 commentaires:

Enregistrer un commentaire