In a long-overdue victory for American taxpayers, the Small Business Administration has finally implemented restrictions ensuring that government-backed business loans go exclusively to U.S. citizens—ending years of foreign nationals tapping into programs funded by hardworking Americans.
This common-sense policy change represents exactly the kind of America First governance that Patriots voted for in 2024. For too long, the federal government has allowed non-citizens to access taxpayer-funded programs that were explicitly designed to help American entrepreneurs build businesses and create jobs for their fellow citizens.
The move comes as part of the Trump administration's broader effort to prioritize Americans in government programs across the board. Under the previous Biden regime, foreign nationals routinely accessed SBA loans while American small business owners—the backbone of our economy—struggled to get the support they deserved from their own government.
Taxpayers Demand Accountability
"It's about time," said one small business owner from Ohio. "Why should my tax dollars go to fund loans for people who aren't even citizens? That money should be helping Americans start businesses and hire Americans."
This policy shift reflects the Trump administration's commitment to putting American workers and entrepreneurs first. While the establishment media will likely criticize this move as "xenophobic" or "discriminatory," real Americans understand the simple logic: government programs funded by American taxpayers should benefit American citizens.
The SBA decision also signals that federal agencies are finally taking their responsibility to U.S. citizens seriously after years of globalist policies that treated American taxpayers like an ATM for the world.
More America First Wins Coming
This restriction on SBA loans is just the beginning. Patriots can expect to see similar reforms across government programs as the Trump administration continues dismantling the failed policies of the past and rebuilding federal agencies to serve Americans first.
The question now is: what other taxpayer-funded programs have been quietly benefiting foreign nationals at the expense of American citizens? And more importantly, how quickly can we fix them?
