The Republican establishment is once again showing their true colors by deliberately sabotaging the SAVE America Act, legislation that would require proof of U.S. citizenship to vote in federal elections. Why? Because actually answering to voters terrifies the swamp more than losing to Democrats.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune has turned blocking this common-sense legislation into pure failure theater, while Texas RINO John Cornyn flip-flopped on the filibuster faster than a pancake at IHOP. Meanwhile, Alaska's Lisa Murkowski – who might as well have a "D" next to her name – is openly opposing the bill that 87% of Americans support.
Let that sink in, Patriots. The so-called "Republican majority" is actively fighting against ensuring only American citizens vote in American elections. If this doesn't expose the uniparty swamp for what it really is, nothing will.
The Swamp's Greatest Fear: Accountability
Here's what the establishment Republicans don't want you to understand: the SAVE Act isn't just about election integrity – it's about congressional accountability. When only legal citizens vote, politicians actually have to serve Americans instead of pandering to illegal aliens and their activist handlers.
The current system allows millions of non-citizens to influence elections, giving politicians a convenient excuse to ignore their actual constituents. "Sorry, I have to vote for amnesty because of the changing demographics," they'll claim, while they actively enable that demographic change.
President Trump has repeatedly called for passage of the SAVE Act, but these Republican senators would rather preserve their cozy swamp arrangements than fulfill their campaign promises. It's the same tired playbook: campaign like conservatives, govern like Democrats.
"When politicians fear voters more than donors, we get better government. When they fear voters more than party leadership, we get representation. The SAVE Act represents everything the establishment fears most – actual democracy."
Every senator blocking this legislation is telling you exactly where their loyalties lie, and it's not with the American people who elected them. The question is: will voters remember this betrayal come primary season, or will they once again be fooled by election-year promises?
