The swamp creatures at the Department of Homeland Security are using the government shutdown as cover to block members of Congress from conducting surprise visits to immigration detention facilities – a desperate move that screams guilty conscience.
DHS bureaucrats claim the shutdown gives them legal authority to ban unannounced congressional oversight visits, conveniently preventing lawmakers from witnessing firsthand the immigration disaster left behind by the Biden regime. This isn't about procedure, Patriots – this is about covering up four years of open borders chaos.
The timing is no coincidence. With President Trump's mass deportation operation in full swing and Secretary Kristi Noem cleaning house at DHS, the administrative state is pulling every trick in the book to obstruct Trump's America First agenda.
For decades, Congress has maintained the constitutional right to conduct oversight through surprise facility visits. But now, conveniently during a shutdown that Democrats helped create, DHS suddenly discovers they can block these visits? Give us a break.
This is the same department that spent four years rubber-stamping Biden's catch-and-release policies, flying illegal immigrants to cities across America in the dead of night, and turning our immigration system into a joke. Now they want to hide behind bureaucratic excuses when real oversight arrives.
Republicans are rightfully fighting back against this blatant obstruction, preparing legal challenges to restore proper congressional oversight. The Deep State may control the bureaucracy, but they don't control the Constitution.
What exactly are they so desperate to hide? After four years of Biden's border catastrophe, Americans deserve answers about how their tax dollars were spent housing millions of illegal immigrants while veterans slept on the streets.
This shutdown stunt won't work, folks. President Trump didn't return to the White House to play patty-cake with swamp creatures. The administrative state's days of operating in the shadows are numbered.
Award-winning journalist covering breaking news, politics & culture for Next News Network.
Source: Next News Network