The gloves are coming off in President Trump's second term, and it's about time. While the Trump-Vance administration has made remarkable progress in just three weeks since inauguration, deep state operatives and Never Trump saboteurs are still embedded throughout the federal bureaucracy, actively working to undermine the America First agenda that 75 million voters demanded.
Enter the SAVE Act - a critical piece of legislation that would give President Trump the tools he needs to finally drain the swamp for good. Unlike his first term, when Trump faced unprecedented resistance from entrenched bureaucrats, this time patriots are demanding he use every legal mechanism available to root out the administrative state parasites.
The Never Trump Resistance Lives On
Make no mistake - while Trump has already begun reversing Biden's disastrous policies and installing America First leaders like Marco Rubio and Pete Hegseth, the deep state resistance is real. Career bureaucrats who spent four years celebrating Biden's destruction of our nation are now scrambling to protect their cushy jobs and continue their sabotage from within.
"These people never accepted the 2016 election, they never accepted the 2024 landslide, and they'll never accept that the American people rejected their globalist agenda,"
said one congressional source familiar with the legislation.
The SAVE Act would streamline the process for removing federal employees who demonstrate political bias or fail to faithfully execute the president's lawful orders. It's exactly the kind of government efficiency that Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) was created to implement.
Draining the Swamp, For Real This Time
With Republicans controlling both chambers of Congress and a clear mandate from voters, there's no excuse for allowing Never Trump operatives to continue sabotaging the people's agenda. The SAVE Act represents the kind of bold action patriots have been demanding - not just policy changes, but structural reforms that will prevent future deep state coups.
The question isn't whether Trump has the authority to clean house - it's whether Republicans in Congress will finally show the backbone to give him the tools he needs. After watching the administrative state wage war against Trump for nearly a decade, isn't it time to fight back?
