The swamp creatures are at it again, folks. More than two dozen House lawmakers – including 13 Republicans who should know better – sent a pathetic letter begging the Trump administration not to impose tariffs on Mexican beer imports.
The letter, obtained by the Washington Examiner and sent to U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, exposes exactly why President Trump's America First agenda faces resistance even from within his own party. These RINOs would rather protect foreign beer companies than American workers and industries.
What's truly disgusting is watching supposed conservatives team up with Democrats to undermine Trump's tariff strategy – the same strategy that's already bringing manufacturing jobs back to America and forcing other nations to respect our trade power again.
Corporate Cronies Over Country
Let's be clear about what's happening here: These lawmakers are prioritizing the profit margins of massive beer distributors and retailers over strengthening American trade leverage. Mexican beer imports generate billions in revenue for foreign companies while American breweries struggle to compete against artificially cheap imports.
President Trump's tariff policies aren't about hurting consumers – they're about forcing fair trade deals that put American workers first. Every time we cave to special interests and corporate lobbyists, we weaken our negotiating position with Mexico and other trading partners.
The America First movement didn't elect Trump to bow down to bipartisan swamp pressure every time big business whines about losing their sweetheart deals.
Where's the bipartisan letter demanding Mexico stop the flow of fentanyl across our border? Where's their urgent plea to fix the trade imbalances that have hollowed out American manufacturing for decades?
Patriots need to remember which Republicans signed this letter when primary season rolls around. The MAGA movement has no room for lawmakers who put Modelo and Corona profits ahead of American prosperity.
Will President Trump cave to this swamp pressure, or will he stick to his guns and show these corporate cronies that America's trade policy isn't for sale to the highest bidder?
