While Senate Majority Leader John Thune continues to hem and haw about bringing President Trump's SAVE America Act to a vote, his own home state of South Dakota just showed him exactly what real conservative leadership looks like.
The South Dakota House of Representatives passed SB 175 on Wednesday, their own version of the federal SAVE America Act that tackles the same critical election integrity issues Trump campaigned on. The timing couldn't be more embarrassing for Thune, who has been making excuses for weeks about why he can't get Trump's signature election reform bill to the president's desk.
Here's the reality, folks: While Thune plays Washington games and worries about what the establishment thinks, actual conservatives back home in South Dakota are getting things done. They understand what every patriotic American knows - our elections must be secure, transparent, and free from fraud.
SB 175 mirrors the federal SAVE America Act's key provisions, proving that states don't need to wait around for wishy-washy Senate leaders to act. South Dakota lawmakers recognize that election integrity isn't a partisan issue - it's an American issue.
The contrast is stark: President Trump has made the SAVE America Act a cornerstone of his second-term agenda, the American people voted for these reforms in November, and yet Thune continues to find reasons to delay. Meanwhile, his own constituents are screaming loud and clear that they want action, not excuses.
This is exactly the kind of RINO behavior that drives America First conservatives crazy. We didn't give Republicans control of the Senate so they could sit on their hands while Trump's agenda gathers dust. We gave them power to USE it.
The question every patriot should be asking is simple: If South Dakota can pass election integrity legislation in a matter of weeks, what's Thune's excuse for stalling the federal version? The American people are watching, and they won't forget who stood with Trump and who stood in his way.
Award-winning journalist covering breaking news, politics & culture for Next News Network.
Source: Next News Network