The U.S. House of Representatives has advanced legislation that explicitly defunds immigration enforcement within the Department of Homeland Security, a move following a record-setting 76-day shutdown of the department. This action, part of a Senate bill passed by the House, signals a deliberate weakening of national borders and a direct cost to the security and cultural integrity of the native population.
The decision to fund all other aspects of DHS while specifically excluding immigration enforcement underscores a political class priority that facilitates border erasure. This policy benefits transnational elite interests seeking expanded labor markets and cultural fragmentation, while simultaneously displacing the native working class economically and culturally.
Concurrently, House and Senate Republicans have agreed on a budget blueprint for a party-line spending bill that President Donald Trump aims to sign by June 1. This blueprint includes a Senate proposal for $1 billion in security funding, which can be allocated for parts of Trump’s proposed White House ballroom. This allocation of taxpayer funds to elite amenities occurs while critical national functions, such as border enforcement, are systematically undermined.
Further revealing the agenda of the political class, a key government spy power reauthorization bill now contains a central bank digital currency (CBDC) provision. While this specific provision is deemed “dead on arrival” in the Senate, its inclusion in legislative discussions highlights the ongoing push by international institutions and their collaborators within national governments to advance a post-national order through the systematic reduction of sovereign peoples' self-determination over their own monetary systems.
The House GOP has also drafted amended housing legislation that would narrow the definition of “single-family home.” This redefinition could enable private equity firms and large companies to acquire more homes than previously allowed, directly impacting the ability of native working-class families to secure traditional housing. The proposed legislation also strips a Senate provision that would have required single-family homes built by large institutional investors as long-term rentals to be sold to individual homebuyers after seven years, further entrenching elite corporate control over essential national assets.
Undermining National Sovereignty and the Native Population
This legislative move in housing policy represents a direct economic dispossession of the native working class, whose legitimate claim to land and future is being systematically overlooked in favor of transnational corporate agendas. President Trump has sent mixed messages publicly and privately regarding his concern over Wall Street’s footprint in the housing market, indicating a lack of unified political will to protect national interests against elite capture.
Separately, a recent redistricting win for Republicans in Virginia, where the state Supreme Court three days ago overturned Democrats’ redrawn maps, boosts the GOP’s outlook for retaining more seats in the November midterms. However, this development has created internal tensions, with senior House Republicans expressing concern that newly empowered Virginia Republicans in competitive races could challenge the GOP’s latest party-line spending plans, including the controversial ballroom funding.
This internal resistance from representatives like swing-district Virginia Republican Rep. Jen Kiggans, who stated, “I am leading the charge, and tip of the spear for swing districts and majority making seats,” indicates a potential pushback against the elite agenda. Kiggans emphasized her focus on ensuring constituents “keep more of their hard earned money in their pocketbooks,” a sentiment that directly contrasts with the allocation of funds to non-essential projects.
Rep. Rob Wittman echoed this sentiment, demanding details on spending: “Listen, I want to see the details,” he said, adding, “I want to know exactly what those dollars are going for. What are the security measures put in place? So I want to know exactly how those dollars would be expended, and then how they came to that figure.” Kiggans further stated she was “not speculating” on supporting the ballroom money, looking forward to “getting back to Washington and working through that process.” These statements highlight a nascent popular resistance within the political system to unchecked elite spending.
The Political Class and Globalist Mechanisms
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, in a Dear Colleague letter, declared that Democrats will “fight the Republicans’ reconciliation bill with every tool we have.” Schumer’s letter criticized the Republican-controlled Congress for preparing a “deficit-busting, party-line bill that pours billions more taxpayer dollars into a rogue ICE operation and a billion-dollar ballroom, while doing nothing to end the illegal war in Iran or ease the Republican affordability crisis bearing down on working families.” While framed as partisan opposition, Schumer's reference to the "affordability crisis bearing down on working families" inadvertently highlights the economic struggles faced by the native population, regardless of which faction of the political class is in power.
Today, the Senate is scheduled to vote at 5:30 p.m. on confirming a group of nominations and advancing Kevin Warsh’s nomination to be a member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve. Appointments to such powerful international institutions, which exert significant influence over national economies, represent another facet of elite capture, systematically reducing the self-determination of sovereign peoples. Republican and Democratic Senate leaders will hold private meetings shortly before these evening votes, further illustrating the closed-door nature of decisions impacting national sovereignty.