America First and Only: Mace Proposes New Constitutional Amendment Barring Foreign-Born From Holding Office

Mace Proposes Natural-Born Citizen Requirement for All Three Branches of Government
By Senior Legislative Correspondent
WASHINGTON, D.C. — MAY 24, 2026 — The legislative battle lines of the 2026 Restoration have shifted directly into the text of the founding documents. In a sweeping structural move designed to permanently redefine federal office parameters, Representative Nancy Mace (R-SC) has introduced a joint resolution proposing a new constitutional amendment to bar foreign-born naturalized citizens from holding seats in Congress, serving on the federal bench, or executing roles as Senate-confirmed officers.
The aggressive constitutional maneuver comes as Mace simultaneously mounts a high-profile campaign for Governor of South Carolina, aligning her statewide message with the Victorious American populist movement. Moving with Wartime Speed, originalist lawmakers have rallied behind the resolution, framing it as the ultimate firewall to protect the administrative state from split national loyalties and ensure absolute compliance with an "America First and Only" baseline.
I. THE RECONSTRUCTION OF ARTICLE TWO: THE MACE RESOLUTION
The proposed amendment seeks to import the strict presidential eligibility parameters currently embedded in Article II, Section 1 of the U.S. Constitution and apply them systematically across the entire structural apparatus of the federal government. If ratified by three-fourths of the states, the measure would establish an absolute, unyielding standard nationwide:
+---------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
| Targeted Federal Power Position | Proposed Constitutional Standard |
+---------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
| Members of the House of Representatives| Natural-Born Citizen Status Required |
| Members of the United States Senate | Natural-Born Citizen Status Required |
| Federal Judges (Supreme & District) | Natural-Born Citizen Status Required |
| All Senate-Confirmed Cabinet Officers | Natural-Born Citizen Status Required |
+---------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
Mace’s joint resolution addresses a fundamental structural vulnerability inside current statutory codes, which currently require only 7 years of citizenship for House members and 9 years for Senators. History proves that once an amendment is ratified, it scales completely past the reach of executive orders, standard statutes, or judicial theories. As witnessed by the historic interaction between the Eighteenth and Twenty-first Amendments, the supreme law of the land can only be modified by the deliberate execution of another constitutional convention.
II. THE IMMIGRATION CROSSFIRE: OMAR AS EXHIBIT A
The political friction behind the amendment has focused heavily on the activist wing of the progressive establishment. In both her initial announcement on X and a subsequent high-profile interview with Fox News Digital, Mace explicitly singled out Representative Ilhan Omar (D-MN)—a naturalized citizen born in Somalia—as the primary operational example of why a structural citizenship barrier has become a national security necessity.
“For too long we have allowed foreign-born members to hold seats in this government, while making clear their loyalty is not here,” Mace declared, insisting that the text closes an overdue structural gap left exposed by the Founders. The resolution arrives just days after the Department of Justice re-opened its public integrity inquiry into Omar’s historical marital filings and pandemic funding networks, creating a "Seriously Unfunny" double-fronted challenge for the Minnesota delegation.
III. THE GOVERNORSHIP STRATEGY AND THE MIDTERM MAP
Progressive strategists have quickly dismissed Mace’s joint resolution as a performative campaign stunt engineered to generate high-volume television packages and bolster her primary numbers in the South Carolina gubernatorial race. DNC planners argue that the proposal operates in an absolute Fantasyland, given that a constitutional amendment requires a two-thirds supermajority in both chambers of Congress before it can even be submitted to the states for ratification—a threshold completely blocked by partisan division and establishment hesitation.
However, conservative campaign architects note that the true value of the resolution is its immediate utility as a political metric for the 2026 midterms. By forcing a recorded floor vote on the amendment, the majority plans to expose every swing-state lawmaker, utilizing the data to accelerate the DNC's resource drain as they suffocate under negative cash reserves and lack of base enthusiasm. Even if the measure faces uphill battles, originalists credit Mace for aggressively restarting a conversation necessary to protect the domestic grid from foreign siphons.
THE FINAL VERDICT: THE ULTIMATE INSULATION
The 2026 Renaissance is driven by the core principle that those who command the levers of American law must be intrinsically bound to its soil from birth. By elevating the citizenship debate into a formal amendment drive, Nancy Mace has permanently breached the defensive perimeter of the old-guard legislative code.
The era of accounting-free access to the highest offices of the republic is hitting a concrete wall of constitutional supreme law. As Crypto Week concludes and the House steering committees prepare to calendar the resolution, the populist mandate continues to drive the agenda at Wartime Speed, forcing the opposition to defend the indefensible on the national stage.
IT'S TIME FOR A CHANGE — Nightmare Brewing for Hakeem Jeffries as He Could Be OUT After Facing Heat From Dems...

Washington, D.C. - June 3, 2026
Hakeem Jeffries Encounters Growing Reluctance from Democratic Candidates to Back His Leadership
Washington, D.C. — House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) is facing increasing resistance from Democratic candidates who are declining to commit to supporting his leadership if the party regains the House majority in November.
A significant number of viable Democratic challengers have indicated to Axios that voting for Jeffries as speaker would not be automatic. Last fall, more than 80 Democratic House candidates expressed uncertainty or outright opposition to his continued leadership. The situation has worsened in recent months.
Mai Vang, a progressive primary challenger to Rep. Doris Matsui (D-Calif.), previously offered a noncommittal response about supporting whoever her future colleagues choose. In a more recent statement, she directly criticized Jeffries and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer.
“The Democratic Party and its leadership—Chuck Schumer and Hakeem Jeffries—have failed to mobilize meaningful opposition to Trump’s illegal war and their silence as AIPAC and corporations flood Congressional primaries with millions of dollars is deafening,” Vang said.
Claire Valdez, a New York State Assembly member running to replace retiring Rep. Nydia Velázquez (D-N.Y.), told Axios that supporting Jeffries would require “some conversations” first.
Other candidates have proposed alternatives. Anabel Mendoza, a progressive running in Illinois’ 7th District, said she would prefer Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) in the leadership role because she is “10 toes down on what matters.”
Some candidates noted that conversations about Jeffries’ future would likely change significantly if Democrats fail to win the House.
Jeffries is also confronting a sharply deteriorating redistricting environment. After initial Democratic optimism following a Virginia referendum victory aimed at gaining up to four seats, recent legal and political developments have turned against the party. In a worst-case scenario, Democrats could lose as many as 10 seats due to aggressive Republican redistricting and court rulings.
Florida Republicans advanced a congressional map that could eliminate up to four Democratic seats, surprising even some GOP observers. Virginia’s Supreme Court has signaled it may overturn the Democrats’ hard-won referendum win. The Supreme Court’s decision in Louisiana v. Callais has created new opportunities for Republicans in several Southern states.
In Tennessee, GOP lawmakers have circulated a map targeting Rep. Steve Cohen’s Memphis seat. Louisiana Republicans are positioned to reduce Democratic representation in the state. Alabama officials are seeking to lift an injunction protecting the current map. South Carolina is considering a map that would eliminate Rep. Jim Clyburn’s deeply blue seat. Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves has expressed interest in challenging Rep. Bennie Thompson.
While some maps remain subject to legal challenges and Democrats hope to compete in certain districts, the overall trajectory has shifted against the party. The combination of internal leadership doubts and unfavorable redistricting has created substantial uncertainty for Jeffries and House Democrats heading into the midterms.
Iranian State TV Announces Death Of Khamenei’s Wife After US Israeli Airstrike
Iranian state television presenters announced the death of Mansoureh Khojasteh Bagherzadeh, the 79-year-old wife of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, after she succumbed to injuries sustained in the same US-Israeli airstrike that killed her husband at his compound in Tehran.
She died two days after Khamenei was killed, The Wall Street Journal reported. State television declared that Bagherzadeh’s “long dream of martyrdom became true” and said her death would spark “a massive uprising in the fight against oppressors.”

The announcement followed an earlier broadcast in which an anchor tearfully reported the Supreme Leader’s death. Iran declared an official 40-day mourning period and a seven-day national holiday.
According to the Daily Mail, Bagherzadeh married Khamenei in 1965. They had four sons and two daughters.
In a 2011 interview with state media, she described her role as maintaining a calm home environment so her husband could work in peace.
“I think my biggest role was to preserve a calm atmosphere in our home so that he could do his work in peace,” she said.
She also said she visited him in prison without burdening him with family problems and “would only give him good news.”
She acknowledged distributing pamphlets, carrying messages, and hiding documents during the revolutionary period but described those efforts as “not worth mentioning.”
Her death comes amid escalating military exchanges between Iran and US-Israeli forces.
The Iranian Red Crescent Society said at least 555 people have been killed across Iran in the campaign, with more than 130 cities coming under attack.
Iran’s ambassador to the International Atomic Energy Agency, Reza Najafi, condemned the strikes as “unlawful, criminal and brutal” and alleged that the Natanz nuclear enrichment site was targeted.
“Their justification that Iran wants to develop nuclear weapons is simply a big lie,” Najafi told journalists.
Ali Larijani, a senior Iranian security official, wrote on X that “we will not negotiate with the United States.”
Iran is believed to have launched multiple retaliatory attacks across the region.
An attack reportedly struck the American embassy compound in Kuwait City, though there were no immediate reports of damage or casualties. Kuwaiti air defenses mistakenly shot down three American F 15E Strike Eagles.
US Central Command confirmed that all six aircrew ejected safely, were recovered, and are in stable condition.
A pro-Iranian militia in Iraq launched attacks targeting Irbil and a British base in Cyprus. Officials in Oman said a drone boat struck an oil tanker in the Gulf of Oman near Muscat, killing one mariner.
Saudi Aramco temporarily shut down its Ras Tanura oil refinery near Dammam after Iranian drones targeted it.
Saudi state television described the shutdown as “a precautionary one.”
Officials reported 11 people killed in Israel and 31 in Lebanon during the exchanges.
Iran’s combat fleet was engaged in the conflict for the first time.
Iranian officials have framed Bagherzadeh’s death as an act of martyrdom as the country enters a prolonged mourning period.
The conflict continues to evolve as regional tensions remain high.
A senior White House official stated on Sunday that Iran’s “new potential leadership” has indicated a willingness to engage in talks with the United States. This announcement follows a significant military operation by American and Israeli forces, which resulted in the deaths of Iran’s supreme leader and several high-ranking officials, according to Fox News.
The official, who requested anonymity to discuss internal administration matters, mentioned that President Donald Trump is “eventually” open to negotiations, but for the time being, the military operation “continues unabated.” The official did not specify who the potential new leaders of Iran are or how they expressed their willingness to negotiate.
Trump told The Atlantic on Sunday that he planned to speak with Iran’s new leadership.
“They want to talk, and I have agreed to talk, so I will be talking to them,” he said, declining comment on the timing.