🚨BREAKING: Jim Jordan introduces a new bill that would require American-born citizenship for both the presidency and Congress. This move aims to ensure that our leaders have deep ties to the country and its values. Do you support this common-sense measure? YES or NO?
@RedLineReportt Add Federal judges onto that bill please. No way a judge from Somalia or China or any foreign country should be ruling against any American.
That's already how it's supposed to be. At least that's what I learned in school before teaching took a back seat to the Leftard narrative. We were taught that anyone that wanted to hold any kind of public office had to be at least 18 years old (35 for the Presidency) and an American born citizen.
@RedLineReportt He and the GOP will not follow through…
@RedLineReportt @TuckerCNews That sounds great to me! Not sure why it's taken so long.
@RedLineReportt It needs to be a constitutional amendment and it should include term limits
@RedLineReportt @TuckerCNews Make it so I don't understand why it wasn't already that way.
@RedLineReportt @realDonaldTrump @StephenM @VP @SenateGOP @AGPamBondi @DNIGabbard 👍💕👍💕👍; pass it ASAP
@RedLineReportt Yes for sure. Never should of happened
@RedLineReportt @RightScopee This needs to be done sooner than later!
@RedLineReportt Will do it, Jim and just don’t talk about it! You always sound really good, but nothing ever gets done!
On August 26, 2025, there is no evidence that U.S. Representative Jim Jordan (R-OH) has introduced a bill requiring American-born (natural-born) citizenship for eligibility to serve as President, Senator, or Representative. The viral claim circulating on social media platforms, which uses nearly identical wording across multiple posts, appears to be unsubstantiated misinformation or a hoax. Official congressional records, Jordan's website, and his X account show no such legislation or announcement.Background on Current U.S. Eligibility RequirementsPresidency: The U.S. Constitution (Article II, Section 1) already requires the President to be a natural-born citizen, at least 35 years old, and a U.S. resident for at least 14 years. Congress: Senators must be U.S. citizens for at least 9 years, at least 30 years old, and residents of the state they represent (Article I, Section 3). Representatives must be U.S. citizens for at least 7 years, at least 25 years old, and residents of the state they represent (Article I, Section 2). Naturalized citizens are eligible for Congress but not the presidency. Changing these would require a constitutional amendment, not a standard bill. Evidence of the Claim Being FalseSearches of Congress.gov for bills sponsored by Jim Jordan in the 119th Congress (2025-2026) yield no matching legislation. His recent bills focus on topics like antitrust enforcement, judiciary oversight, and immigration enforcement, but none address citizenship requirements for federal officeholders. Jordan's official House website (jordan.house.gov) has no press releases or news items about such a bill. The most recent updates as of August 26, 2025, are from earlier in the year (e.g., February 2025) and cover unrelated issues like border security and committee hearings. No posts from Jordan's verified X account (@Jim_Jordan ) mention introducing or supporting a bill on this topic. Searches for relevant keywords (e.g., "bill citizenship presidency congress") return zero results. A related bill, H.J.Res.103 (introduced June 30, 2025), proposes a constitutional amendment to limit birthright citizenship under the 14th Amendment by redefining "subject to the jurisdiction" to require at least one parent to be a U.S. national, permanent resident, or active-duty military alien. However, it was sponsored by Rep. Andy Barr (R-KY), not Jordan, and does not alter eligibility for the presidency or Congress. 2 sources Another bill, H.R.569 (introduced January 21, 2025), also limits birthright citizenship but is unrelated to officeholder requirements. Origin and Spread of the RumorThe exact phrasing in the query—"Jim Jordan introduces a new bill that would require American-born citizenship for both the presidency and Congress. This move aims to ensure that our leaders have deep ties to the country and its values"—originated as a viral meme or poll question on X and Facebook, often accompanied by images of Jordan and American flags. It began circulating widely around August 23, 2025, and has been reposted thousands of times by conservative-leaning accounts, many of which are fan pages or parody/news aggregation profiles.
@RedLineReportt @RightScopee Should have been that way anyway
@RedLineReportt Should be the same fir mayor's and governors
@RedLineReportt @TuckerCNews Thank goodness for Jim Jordan! That should have happened years ago! Hope the UK is watching!
@RedLineReportt yes, good idea - why not make it for ALL elected officials because they have to or should swear on the constitution?