“AMERICAN SOIL LEADERSHIP ACT — NO FOREIGN-BORN IN FEDERAL POWER.”
“Born American — or bust.”

“Born American — or bust.”

Supporters Roared — Critics Erupted
“This violates equal protection and weaponizes birthplace as a political caste system.”
#HawkNativeBorn Hits 1.2 Billion Posts in 47 Minutes
58% of Hawk’s party base supported the bill.
71% of independents called it “too extreme.”

Then Senator Ransom Clay Entered the Fight
“Jonas Hawk is right, folks.”
“America for Americans — born of her breath, raised on her land!”
The Senate fractured instantly. Lines drawn. Tempers inhaled. Microphones caught everything.
Social Media Went Nuclear
Within minutes of Clay’s endorsement, reactions detonated:
Online Advertising Solutions
PatriotFeed (conservative platform)
“HAWK & CLAY JUST SEALED D.C.’S BORDER — NO MORE FOREIGN PUPPETS! ”
ProgressiveStream
“This is white-nationalist governance wrapped in a flag.”
Rep. Selena Varga (progressive icon)
Live-streamed as she paced her office:
“Birthplace does not equal loyalty! This is xenophobia with a gavel!”
Sen. Clay’s reply on X
with a photo of Plymouth Rock:
“Supremacy? Sugar, supremacy is letting Beijing birth-tourists rewrite our Constitution.”
Views: 85 million in nine minutes.
The Pros — and the Atomic Cons

Supporters argued:
Opponents countered:
The Political Fallout: 14 Seats in Immediate Jeopardy

2026 Midterm Chaos: A Citizenship Cage Fight
Election strategists say Hawk’s bill has already reshaped the political battlefield.
If the bill passes:
Candidates will be vetted by birthplace first, policy second.
Naturalized Americans may run grassroots insurgencies.
If the bill fails:
The Legal Hurdle: Ratification or Ruination

“We’ll get it — or burn trying,” he told reporters.