DC court shocks liberals and revives Trump era deportation rule finally puts Americans first

It’s about time common sense showed up in Washington, D.C. For once, a federal appellate court managed to do the right thing and revive a critical deportation rule from the Trump era. This decision isn’t just a legal victory—it’s a rare moment where the system actually put American citizens first.

The Trump administration worked hard to crack down on illegal immigration. They expanded what’s called “expedited removal,” which gives officers the power to send back illegal aliens much faster, without endless bureaucracy or activist judges getting in the way. Predictably, the left threw a tantrum and tried to block this commonsense move in every court possible. They want open borders. They want chaos. They want to act like America’s laws don’t matter.

Somehow, despite all the noise from activist liberals and their globalist lawyers, the court smacked down their nonsense. Apparently, not every judge in D.C. is part of the radical woke mob. Maybe there’s hope yet for our overwhelmed immigration system and for citizens tired of being ignored. This policy isn’t about hating anyone—it’s about protecting families, keeping our streets safe, and stopping an out-of-control border crisis.

Democrats twist themselves in knots screaming about “compassion.” But what about compassion for working Americans who deal with the fallout of wide-open borders? Drugs, crime, and job loss don’t seem to matter to elites in their gated communities—they just want to pat themselves on the back for being “tolerant” while the rest of us pay the price. This ruling punches a hole right through their hypocrisy.

The only shock bigger than this court ruling? That it happened in D.C., of all places. Maybe the message is finally getting through. American laws matter. American borders matter. If only liberals in Congress would listen, maybe we’d stop rewarding lawbreakers and start standing up for the law-abiding. Is that really so much to ask?

Source: Redstate


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