Political Division
Divides America
Trump shames Democrats for refusing to stand on call to put Americans over illegal immigrants
By Lauren Green
Washinton Examiner
Democrats stayed seated when President Donald Trump asked if the first duty of the government is to protect its citizens at his State of the Union address.
“If you agree with the statement, then stand up and show your support: The first duty of the American government is to protect American citizens, not illegal aliens.”
Republicans stood, clapped, and whistled for a couple of minutes before the president condemned Democrats for not standing. “Isn’t that a shame? You should be ashamed of yourself, not standing up,” Trump said after applause died down.
The chamber got rowdy as Trump condemned Democrats, as a handful of members yelled back. Democrats proceeded to respond to the president, saying, “You killed Alex,” referring to Minnesota resident and ICU nurse Alex Pretti, who was shot and killed by immigration enforcement personnel in Minneapolis on Jan. 24.
Deputy chief of staff for policy and homeland security adviser Stephen Miller echoed the president’s condemnation of Democrats, saying in a post on X, “The immortal visual of the entire Democrat party—upon explicit repeated invitation—refusing to stand for the core moral principle that US government owes its allegiance to US citizens and not foreign criminal invaders, is the most shocking image in the history of the US Congress.”
Shouldn't members of Congress love America first? Not if you're a Democrat. | Opinion
Rep. Delia Ramirez didn't just celebrate her Guatemalan roots. Before world leaders, she elevated the country that her parents fled above the nation she was elected to represent.
Ingrid Jacques
USA TODAY
Like most Americans, my ancestors immigrated to the United States to make a better life for themselves and their future families. Six out of eight of my great-grandparents came from Norway. I grew up very aware of that heritage, with some Norwegian traditions passed down through the generations.
Yet, neither my parents – nor my grandparents, who were first-generation Americans – have ever referred to themselves as Norwegian Americans. They are Americans. And they’re proud of it.
This country really is a melting pot of immigrants from all over the world, and that’s part of what makes America unlike any other on earth. The mutual understanding that America is a land of opportunity and that it’s an honor to call it home is what binds citizens together, even if our ancestors came from diverse parts of the globe.
Of all Americans, you’d think members of Congress would be the first to embrace utmost allegiance to their country. For some Democrats, that’s not the case. “I’m a proud Guatemalan before I’m an American,” Illinois Rep. Delia Ramirez, a member of the Homeland Security Committee, said in Spanish to a conference last weekend of leftist leaders in Mexico City. It’s a jarring statement coming from one of our nation’s lawmakers.
Congress members take an oath to our country. Do they mean it?
Ramirez wasn’t the only U.S. progressive in attendance at the second annual Panamerican Congress. She was joined by several other “Squad” members, progressive House lawmakers, including Reps. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota and Rashida Tlaib of Michigan. The event was organized in part by the leader of Progressive International, a "radical left-wing group," according to Fox News.
At the Progressive International's inaugural summit in 2020, its leaders declared that "capitalism is the virus": "We aspire to eradicate capitalism everywhere. We believe that exploitation, dispossession, and environmental destruction are written into the genetic code of capitalism. We do not support efforts to save this system, nor enable its expansion to all corners of the earth."
It makes one wonder what members of the U.S. Congress were doing there in the first place, but I digress. Ramirez isn’t the only congresswoman to make her disdain toward our country known. Omar, who escaped war-torn Somalia as a child to come to the United States, claimed in June that America was being turned into “one of the worst countries” – presumably because she disagrees with President Donald Trump.
Unlike Omar, Ramirez was born a U.S. citizen after her Guatemalan mother crossed into the country while she was pregnant with Ramirez.
It’s hard to think of another country where a first-generation citizen could go from poverty to the halls of Congress. That’s not enough, however, to win Ramirez’s loyalty over the corrupt country her parents escaped. Members of Congress take an oath to “support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic,” and promise they will “bear true faith and allegiance to the same.”
Ramirez’s comment on the world stage seems to defy that oath.
Should Ramirez be 'deported'? She should at least apologize.
Once Ramirez’s anti-American comments hit social media, the pushback was swift.
The White House called her words “despicable.” Rep. Andy Ogles, R-Tennessee, wrote: “Denaturalize, deport, and kick her off Homeland Committee. We know where her allegiances lie.” The Homeland Security X account also questioned her allegiance. The House member, for her part, has responded with defensiveness.
“Let’s call it what it is: today’s attacks are a weak attempt to silence my dissent and invalidate my patriotic criticism of the nativist, white supremacist, authoritarians in government,” Ramirez said in a statement. “It is the definition of hypocrisy that members of Congress − who betray their oath each day they enable Trump − are attacking me for celebrating my Guatemalan American roots.”
Ramirez didn’t just celebrate her roots, however. Before world leaders, she elevated the country where her parents fled above her own.
She's an American and a member of Congress. There's no defense for what she said. Ramirez owes her constituents – and the rest of us – an apology.
The American Security Coalition does not accept an apology. We consider the statements and actions of Democrat leader to be deplorible and a violation of their oath. They should be removed from office.