Florida Republican Representative Randy Fine is speaking the truth that establishment politicians refuse to acknowledge: mass deportation of illegal immigrants is the single most effective way to make America affordable for working families again.
Fine's bold declaration comes as President Trump's mass deportation operation enters full swing, targeting the millions of illegal aliens who have flooded into our country and driven up costs for everything from housing to healthcare to education.
The math is simple, folks. When you have millions of people in the country illegally competing for the same jobs, housing, and services as American citizens, basic economics tells us that prices go up and wages go down. It's supply and demand 101 – something the radical left conveniently ignores when pushing their open borders agenda.
Americans Are Paying the Price for Biden's Border Disaster
For four years under the Biden regime, working Americans watched helplessly as their cost of living skyrocketed while millions of illegal immigrants received free housing, healthcare, and education courtesy of the taxpayer. Meanwhile, citizens couldn't afford rent in their own neighborhoods.
Social media is buzzing with support for common-sense immigration enforcement. Twitter user @Jaywestco shared Fine's comments, highlighting how GOP leaders are finally willing to state the obvious connection between illegal immigration and affordability.
"GOP Rep Randy Fine declares that deporting all illegal immigrants is the top way to make the US affordable," the post noted, referencing the Fox News coverage.
This isn't rocket science – it's basic economics that every American family understands when they're competing with illegal workers for jobs or watching their children's schools become overcrowded with non-English speakers.
Trump's Promise in Action
President Trump promised the American people he would launch the largest deportation operation in U.S. history, and he's delivering. With leaders like Randy Fine speaking truth to power about the economic impact of mass illegal immigration, we're finally seeing politicians who put Americans first.
The question isn't whether mass deportation will make America more affordable – it's how quickly we can restore the rule of law and give working families the relief they deserve. How much longer should American citizens subsidize the world's poor while their own communities crumble?
