Rep. Barry Moore (R-AL) is making waves with a bold declaration that has establishment Republicans clutching their pearls: it's time to nuke the Senate filibuster and ram through President Trump's America First agenda without Democrat obstruction.
Speaking on Friday's "Alex Marlow Show," the Trump-endorsed Alabama Senate candidate laid out his vision for getting things done in Washington - and it doesn't include playing patty-cake with Chuck Schumer's obstructionist Democrats.
"If we really want to achieve this America First agenda, we need to nuke the filibuster so Schumer and those guys can't shut it down," Moore declared, showing the kind of fighting spirit that Trump's base has been demanding from Republicans for years.
No More Mr. Nice Guy
Moore's priorities read like a MAGA wishlist: secure borders, secure elections, and actually delivering results instead of empty promises. While RINOs worry about "Senate traditions" and "bipartisan cooperation," Moore understands what every patriot knows - Democrats will never willingly help implement conservative policies.
"We've seen what happens when we play by their rules," Moore explained. "They obstruct everything when they're in the minority, then eliminate rules when they're in power. It's time Republicans learned how to win."
This isn't just campaign rhetoric - Moore is talking about fundamental changes to how Washington operates. The filibuster has become the Democrats' favorite weapon to kill conservative legislation, even when Republicans have clear electoral mandates from the American people.
Trump's Agenda Demands Action
With Trump back in the White House and Republicans controlling Congress, Moore recognizes this might be the last chance to implement real reform before the establishment swamp reasserts control. Border security, election integrity, and draining the administrative state can't wait for Democrat permission.
The question isn't whether Moore is right - it's whether enough Republicans have the backbone to follow through. Patriots are tired of watching their electoral victories get neutered by Senate procedural games while America burns.
Will Moore's nuclear option become Republican strategy, or will the party's surrender caucus find new ways to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory?
