JD Vance’s Family Member Denied Transplant Because She’s Unvaccinated
A young member of Vice President J.D. Vance’s family has been denied a life-saving transplant because she is not vaccinated against Covid-19 or its subsequent variants.
A young member of Vice President J.D. Vance’s family has been denied a life-saving transplant because she is not vaccinated against Covid-19 or its subsequent variants.
President Donald Trump’s executive order banning birthright citizenship for illegal aliens, tied to the invasion on the border, tees up a major Supreme Court case that could become a historic Trump win that fixes a growing, decades-long problem.
On a wide range of issues, voters in the consummate battleground state of Wisconsin report wide approval of Trump’s aggressive policy agenda, just weeks into his presidency.
A plurality of Americans “strongly support” changing the federal law to ensure illegal migrants cannot get citizenship for their newly born children, according to a poll by Emerson College.
One of the biggest issues of the new Trump term is birthright citizenship. The president is pushing back against it with an executive order. He has a valid, constitutional argument.
There is a common misconception in the United States that the Fourteenth Amendment to the US Constitution mandates that the US government grant citizenship to anyone and everyone born within the borders of the United States.
Claremont Institute scholars, including me, Ed Erler, Tom West, John Marini, and Michael Anton, President Trump’s incoming Director of Policy Planning at the State Department, have been contending for years—decades, really—that the 14th Amendment’s Citizenship Clause does not provide automatic citizenship for everyone born on U.S. soil, no matter the circumstances.
Restoration News has created a resource to help you discover the illegal aliens invading your community—and it’s growing every month.
Wisconsin election clerks referred 30 instances of suspected fraud to prosecutors over the past year