Washington, D.C. – On a night of unprecedented tension, Senator John Neely Kennedy passed the “Born in America Act” by a narrow 51–49 margin, igniting a political and public storm

The bill stipulated that only U.S.-born citizens could hold any federal office—from Congress, to the Cabinet, to the courts, down to the most seemingly lowly positions. No exceptions, no dual citizenship, no “foreign anchors.”

🔥 KENNEDY: THE Purge Began Right Here in WASHINGTON

On the Senate floor, Kennedy stood alone under the bright lights, holding the Constitution and the voting rolls. He looked straight into the C-SPAN camera and declared:

“From this moment on, the Constitution is back in effect. All you imported politicians with two passports, pack your bags. America belongs to the born.”

This statement immediately caused a strong reaction:

Democrats screamed “Fascism!”

Republicans stood up like the day they won the World War, cheering “America back to the Americans!”

Chaos erupted in the stands, Secret Service blocked off, Schumer pounded the table until blood was splattered.

⚡ SOCIAL MEDIA EXPLODES – EXTREMELY TOXIC DIVISION

The hashtag #BornInAmerica reached 18.4 billion views in just 9 minutes.
Half the Senate called emergency lawyers, the other half booked tickets to leave Washington.

Kennedy posted only one photo: the Constitution placed on top of the recently passed bill, with the caption:

“America is back in American hands. Good night.”

🔥 EXTREME CONTROVERSY – AMERICAN POLITICS DIVIDED

Supporters called it “a necessary purge, saving America from imported politicians”.

Detractors accused Kennedy of “inflaming hatred, undermining democracy, dividing the nation”.

Experts warned: the new law could change the entire power structure, from the Senate to the Court, and set a dangerous precedent for the future of America.

Washington has never been so heated. The capital has turned into an ideological battlefield, and Kennedy – with a law – is in the eye of the storm.