GOP Unveils Aggressive Proposal Amid Supreme Court Fallout

A new immigration enforcement proposal from the Oversight Project calls for expanded deportation operations targeting entire family units, including pregnant illegal aliens, amid political fallout from a recent Supreme Court ruling on birthright citizenship.

The group says the decision has created momentum for broader enforcement aligned with President Donald Trump’s immigration agenda.

Rather than relying on criminal history as the basis for enforcement, the proposal centers undocumented households as the primary unit of removal operations.

It argues that limiting deportations to individuals with convictions or pending charges leaves a large share of the undocumented population untouched and allows long-term settlement patterns to continue.

Under the framework, removal proceedings would not depend on criminal charges.

The plan, according to The Post Millennial, extends enforcement priorities to workplaces, residential areas with high undocumented populations, and locations associated with birth tourism activity.

These settings are described as areas where large-scale operations could be conducted more efficiently.

The approach shifts emphasis away from individualized processing and toward broader household-level enforcement.

The document uses explicit language in outlining its position.

It states, “Simply put, if an illegal alien is expecting to give birth, gives birth, or has given birth to a child on US soil, then they should be deported and take their family with them, regardless of ill-gotten citizenship of that child,” and describes the strategy as part of what it calls the “largest deportation operation in American history.”

Oversight Project President Mike Howell defended the proposal, saying, “My country is more than a pile of magic dirt. While the Supreme Court may consider anchor babies of illegal aliens to be citizens, they are not my countrymen,” framing citizenship as rooted in national identity rather than place of birth alone.

Reaction to the Supreme Court ruling has broadened among Republican lawmakers and conservative figures.

President Trump has called for congressional action on birthright citizenship, arguing that statutory changes are sufficient to revise the policy framework without a constitutional amendment, Newsweek reported.

He has urged lawmakers to act quickly, saying Congress has authority under existing law to reshape citizenship rules.

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Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul (R) also introduced an amendment aimed at ending automatic citizenship for children born to illegal aliens, calling the Supreme Court ruling “disappointing” and urging lawmakers to revisit what he described as a flawed interpretation of citizenship law, The Gateway Pundit reported.

The Supreme Court ruling reaffirmed a long-standing interpretation of the 14th Amendment’s Citizenship Clause, holding that children born in the United States to parents who are unlawfully or temporarily present are citizens at birth, with narrow exceptions such as children of foreign diplomats.

The decision has intensified debate over how immigration enforcement proposals intersect with constitutional definitions of citizenship, as competing policy approaches seek to expand enforcement beyond individuals to entire households.

That precedent reflects more than a century of judicial interpretation under which nearly all individuals born on U.S. soil automatically receive citizenship.

Legal scholars note that changing that framework would likely require either a constitutional amendment or a significant shift in judicial precedent, keeping the issue at the center of ongoing political and legal debate.

By Reece Walker

Reece Walker covers news and politics with a focus on exposing public and private policies proposed by governments, unelected globalists, bureaucrats, Big Tech companies, defense departments, and intelligence agencies.

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