House in disarray after controversial move stalls legislation on voter ID, judicial power, and Trump’s America First agenda.
⚠️ You Won’t Believe What Happened in Congress This Week
A surprising internal feud rocked Capitol Hill as Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) unleashed harsh criticism on fellow Republican Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL) over a highly controversial effort that brought House business to a standstill.
At the center of the firestorm? A proposal to allow proxy voting for new parents in Congress — letting lawmakers cast votes without being physically present.
🔒 Critical GOP Bills Blocked — Including Proof of Citizenship to Vote
Luna’s maneuver, backed by Democrats and nine House Republicans, stopped a key procedural rule and forced Republican leaders to cancel the entire week’s voting schedule.
The result?
✅ A bill requiring proof of U.S. citizenship to vote — stalled.
✅ A bill limiting the power of activist federal judges — delayed.
✅ Progress on President Trump’s America First agenda — halted.
💬 Marjorie Taylor Greene: “Congress Was Hijacked”
Greene took to X (formerly Twitter) with a blistering rebuke of Luna’s move:
“Congress was hijacked this week over a resolution that lets politicians skip work and vote from home. We have serious business — protecting elections, stopping liberal judges — and this is how we’re spending our time?”
She didn’t stop there.
“Being a member of Congress is a sacred responsibility. If you can’t show up and do the job, step aside and let someone else serve.”
👨👩👧 Proxy Voting: Convenience or Constitutional Crisis?
The resolution — supported by 218 lawmakers via a discharge petition — would give new parents 12 weeks of proxy voting, something Greene and other constitutional conservatives are calling a dangerous precedent.
Greene, a mother of three, explained:
“When my kids were young, I prioritized raising them. Now I’m here to serve. There’s a time and a season. Congress isn’t a part-time job or a personal hobby — it’s service to your country.”
⏳ What Happens Next — And Why It Matters to You
Speaker Mike Johnson hinted that Republican leadership may still try to kill the measure, stating:
“We’ll regroup and come back.”
But for everyday Americans — especially patriotic voters over 50 — this raises deeper questions:
- Are our elected leaders committed to serving the people, or just serving themselves?
- Is Congress becoming a place of personal privilege instead of public duty?
- And how long will President Trump’s pro-American agenda be delayed by internal distractions?
📢 TAKE ACTION: Keep the Pressure on Congress
Share this article. Comment. Call your representatives. It’s time to remind Washington that we sent them there to work — not work from home.
🗳️ Support voter ID. Stop activist judges. Back America First.