Friday, May 22, 2026

Mace amendment would require natural-born citizenship for members of Congress and federal judges

Mace amendment would require natural-born citizenship for members of Congress and federal judges

The amendment would apply prospectively, meaning no existing officeholder would lose office if ratified, including Reps. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, Pramila Jayapal of Washington, and Shri Thanedar of Michigan.


Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., introduced a constitutional amendment requiring natural-born citizenship for members of Congress and federal judges, sparing the Democrats she targeted while potentially affecting several Republicans.

The amendment would apply prospectively, meaning no existing officeholder would lose office if ratified, including Reps. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, Pramila Jayapal of Washington, and Shri Thanedar of Michigan, whom Mace named in her news release.

The proposal, H.J.Res.188, has no cosponsors and faces long odds in Congress. Since 1973, more than 3,900 joint resolutions proposing constitutional amendments have been introduced, according to Congress.gov. Fewer than 9% received committee consideration, and none have been ratified since 1992.

The Constitution requires only the president and vice president to be natural-born citizens under Article II. Mace's proposal would extend that requirement to all members of Congress, federal judges, and Senate-confirmed officers, including ambassadors and public ministers. Under Article I, House members must have been U.S. citizens for at least seven years before their election and senators for at least nine years, with no natural-born citizenship requirement for either chamber.

A Center Square review of Congress.gov found no prior joint resolution proposing to extend the natural-born citizenship requirement to members of Congress.

Previous congressional action on the issue has largely moved in the opposite direction. In 2008, the Senate unanimously passed a resolution affirming that Sen. John McCain, who was born in the Panama Canal Zone while his father served in the military, qualified as a natural-born citizen eligible for the presidency.

If ratified, the amendment would likely make several Republican lawmakers ineligible to serve, including members who became U.S. citizens through naturalization.

A May 1, 2026, Congressional Research Service report identifies four foreign-born Republican House members: Reps. Victoria Spartz of Indiana, born in Ukraine; Carlos Gimenez of Florida, born in Cuba; Juan Ciscomani of Arizona, born in Mexico; and Young Kim of California, born in South Korea. Public biographies describe them as immigrants who later became U.S. citizens. In the Senate, Republican Sen. Bernie Moreno of Ohio, born in Bogotá, Colombia, became a U.S. citizen at age 18, according to his official biography.

Mace said the amendment is intended to ensure loyalty to the United States.

"If you hold power in the American government, you should be a natural born American citizen," Mace said in a statement. "The people writing America's laws, confirming America's judges and representing America on the world stage should have one loyalty: America."

Mace announced in August 2025 that she is running for governor of South Carolina.

The proposal drew criticism from several naturalized lawmakers.

Jayapal called the proposal "racist," "narrow-minded" and "xenophobic" in a statement Wednesday.

Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, a Democrat from Illinois, who immigrated to the United States as an infant and later became a citizen, called the amendment "a betrayal" of American principles, citing former President Ronald Reagan's statement that "anyone, from any corner of the Earth, can come to live in America and become an American."

Thanedar said on X, he planned to introduce a counter-resolution targeting Mace. It had not been filed as of 4 p.m. Thursday.

Mace's office, Spartz, Moreno and Omar did not respond to requests for comment before publication.

Ilya Somin, a law professor at George Mason University's Antonin Scalia Law School, said most proposed constitutional amendments fail to gain traction.

"Most of these proposed constitutional amendments are essentially dead on arrival, or at least don't get very far at all," Somin said.

Somin said lawmakers often introduce constitutional amendments to highlight personal priorities or appeal to specific constituencies. Asked whether the large number of unsuccessful amendment proposals represents a meaningful use of congressional resources, Somin said there is "probably some waste of time and resources," but said it likely wasn't significant.

John Vile, a political science professor at Middle Tennessee State University and author of the Encyclopedia of Constitutional Amendments, said the volume of proposals is not new. As of his most recent edition in 2023, approximately 12,000 amendment resolutions had been introduced in U.S. history — but only 34 were ever proposed by Congress, and only 27 were ratified. Vile said he could not identify any prior proposal to extend the natural-born citizenship requirement to Congress.

"The nation goes through cycles of Nativism that are often exploited by so-called populists," Vile said.

He called the amendment "an extremely regressive step," adding he was "wary of making any unnecessary distinctions between types of U.S. citizenship."

In the 118th Congress, 81 constitutional amendment resolutions were introduced. Six received committee consideration, and none passed both chambers.

To be ratified, a constitutional amendment must pass the House and Senate by two-thirds votes and then be approved by three-fourths of state legislatures — 38 states. The last ratified amendment, the 27th Amendment governing congressional pay raises, was approved in 1992 after originally being proposed by James Madison in 1789 — 203 years earlier.

Mace's resolution has been referred to the House Judiciary Committee, where most constitutional amendment proposals do not receive hearings. In the 119th Congress, 63 constitutional amendment resolutions have been introduced. One has received committee consideration.

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The actual result of DEI: It has become abundantly clear that having multitudes of permanent residents from the third world join up in exchange for expedited naturalization isn't so much a value added as a massive liability.


A damning internal report reveals that when it comes to Canada's military, diversity is not a strength.

David McGuinty, Canada's liberal defense minister, boasted late last month that the DEI-ed Canadian military had surpassed its regular force recruiting target for the second consecutive year, enrolling 7,310 new members in fiscal year 2025-26. That brings the total of full-time military members to 67,827. Another 25,054 souls are in the reserves.

"The Canadian Armed Forces' continued recruiting success signals more than progress — it reflects a renewed strength at the core of our military," said McGuinty.

'I think we are representative of the Canadian demographic.'

What McGuinty neglected to mention in his optimistic press release was that nearly 20%of these recruits aren't actually Canadians, thanks to a 2022 decision by then-Trudeau Defense Minister Anita Anand — the daughter of Indian migrants — to drop the military's citizenship requirement.

It has become abundantly clear that having multitudes of permanent residents from the third world join up in exchange for expedited naturalization isn't so much a value added as a massive liability.

A damning and confidential Canadian Forces Leadership and Recruit School report that was authored by Lieutenant-Colonel Marc Kieley and obtained both by Juno News and the National Post highlights some of the various problems foreign recruits have created for the military.


The report, which was also leaked online, notes that in Quebec's first noncitizen Francophone platoon, only 48% managed to graduate and there were constant ethnic clashes, specifically between the Cameroonian and Ivory Coast candidates.

More generally, noncitizen recruits in the Canadian military — some of whom had been in the country for only three months — have demonstrated a profound lack of "respect toward women" superiors and peers.

"For many candidates, it is the first time they have lived with members of a different sex, and for some it is also the first time they have been expected to treat women as their peers," said the report. "Platoons are also reporting inter-candidate cultural frustrations, with lack of respect towards women being the most common concern."

Some foreigners apparently also have issues taking orders from younger superiors.

"Older candidates from certain cultural backgrounds are also more likely to experience friction when responding to younger CFLRS instructors due to cultural hierarchies based on age," said the confidential report.

In addition to a failure of baseline competency, ethnic infighting, communication issues, and a rampant disrespect for women and junior officers, foreigners also have unrealistic expectations going into their training.

The report noted, for instance, that a "surprising number of permanent resident candidates believed they would simply go home after basic training" and that foreigners in officer training "are more likely to imagine a CAF officer position as a public service job, rather than a military occupation."

Physical fitness is also an issue for those recruits McGuinty is hoping will renew the Canadian military's strength. Permanent residents failed the initial basic training fitness screening test last year at a rate of 14.79% compared to 7.89% for citizens within the same period.

There has been some internal pushback.

According to the report, "On French (officer) platoons, where permanent residents have made up 50%-80% of all candidates, there have been more emotional responses, with Francophone staff openly raising the question of whether it is appropriate for officer commissions to be granted to non-Canadian citizens."

Commodore Pascal Belhumeur, a spokesman for the Canadian Department of National Defense, told the National Post, "I think the Canadian Armed Forces that we are recruiting is a representation of Canadian society now."

According to Statistics Canada, 23% of the persons presently in Canada are immigrants.

"If you look at the number of Canadians that are foreign-born and the number of people who we’re bringing into the Canadian Armed Forces, I think we are representative of the Canadian demographic," said Belhumeur, adding that the military is "proud to reflect the diversity of Canadian society."


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Another corrupt Biden administration official: DOJ asked to probe whether Biden officials let Microsoft off easy in exchange for cushy jobs


Microsoft appears to have been held to a different standard than other federal contractors — by Biden officials it later hired.

Former officials in the Biden administration have been credibly accused of letting a tech giant slide on preventable cybersecurity breaches only to later secure lucrative arrangements with or cushy jobs at the same corporation.

The American Accountability Foundation, a nonprofit government oversight and research organization, asked the Justice Department in a lengthy letter on Tuesday to open a formal investigation into Microsoft and several Biden officials.

'We will act where the facts and the law support it.'

Among the Biden cronies singled out in the letter is Lisa Monaco, the former deputy attorney general whose post-government career move captured President Donald Trump's attention in September 2025.

Trump wrote that "Corrupt and Totally Trump Deranged Lisa Monaco (A purported pawn of Legal Lightweight Andrew Weissmann)" had "been shockingly hired as the President of Global Affairs for Microsoft, in a very senior role with access to Highly Sensitive Information. Monaco's having that kind of access is unacceptable, and cannot be allowed to stand. She is a menace to U.S. National Security, especially given the major contracts that Microsoft has with the United States Government."

Monaco's employment at Microsoft apparently also struck the team at AAF as potentially problematic.

The watchdog noted that Monaco — who had announced a cyber fraud initiative in 2021 aimed at using the False Claims Act against contractors who intentionally misrepresent cybersecurity risks — proved eager to bring actions against numerous companies and institutions, but never against Microsoft.

Monaco and the rest of the Biden administration's inaction against Microsoft is especially strange because the company suffered five massive cyber intrusions by foreign criminal and state-sponsored hacker groups between 2019 and 2023 that directly and adversely impacted the U.S. government.

The AAF emphasized that these intrusions "penetrated the National Nuclear Security Administration and the Departments of Treasury, State, Commerce, and Justice, as well as the National Security Council and numerous other federal agencies" and "resulted in the theft of tens of thousands of government emails, including correspondence from the U.S. Ambassador to China, the Secretary of Commerce," and other bigwigs.

RELATED: 'RedSun' flaw in Microsoft's security software lets hackers take over your PC. Here's how to protect it. 

Former President Joe Biden and Lisa Monaco. Ting Shen/Bloomberg/Getty Images

One of these cyber attacks, SolarWinds, reportedly relied on the exploitation of a flaw in Microsoft's Active Directory Federation Services. The company was allegedly aware of the flaw for years but avoided patching it for fear of jeopardizing a multibillion-dollar federal cloud contract.

Former Microsoft President Brad Smith told Congress in 2021 that "there was no vulnerability in any Microsoft product or service that was exploited" in the SolarWinds attack.

While some Biden officials proved willing to assign Microsoft some blame, it was never too much or pursued as grounds for punitive action.

The Cyber Safety Review Board, an outfit established by former Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, concluded that Storm-0558, a separate cyber attack executed by Beijing-linked hackers in May 2023, was enabled by a "cascade of Microsoft's avoidable errors."

Despite such recognition that it had dropped the ball, Microsoft managed to evade any meaningful reckoning.

"These facts, in our view, present squarely the kind of conduct that the Biden administration's Civil Cyber-Fraud Initiative was created to address: knowing or reckless misrepresentations by a federal contractor regarding the cybersecurity of products sold to the government," the American Accountability Foundation said in its letter. "Yet to our knowledge, no False Claims Act investigation of Microsoft's conduct has ever been opened, while other contractors whose conduct appears materially less egregious have been pursued under the same initiative."

Besides Monaco, the watchdog made a point of mentioning several other Biden administration officials, including:

  • Bryan Vorndran, a former assistant director of the FBI's Cyber Division who served as the bureau's representative on the Cyber Safety Review Board. Vorndran, who the AAF said was mysteriously recused from the board's probe into the Storm-0558 attack, joined Microsoft in June 2025 as deputy chief information security officer.
  • Jerry Davis, a member of the CSRB from 2022 to 2025 who participated in the board's investigation of the Storm-0558 attack. Davis was hired as a chief security adviser at Microsoft three months after the CSRB released its report faulting the company for "inadequate" security culture.
  • Robert Joyce, the former director of cybersecurity at the National Security Agency and an inaugural member of the CSRB. After leaving the NSA in 2024, he founded a cybersecurity firm that the AAF suggested counts Microsoft as one of its clients.

The AAF stressed that "federal ethics rules prohibit government officials from participating in matters in which they have a financial interest, and require cooling-off periods before certain officials may represent private parties before their former agencies."

While the AAF did not "allege that any individual violated any specific law or regulation," the watchdog noted that an investigation into the matter is warranted.

A Justice Department spokesperson told Breitbart, "The Department of Justice is committed to aggressively fighting fraud and protecting taxpayer dollars. We welcome referrals from anyone with credible information about fraud, and we will act where the facts and the law support it."


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