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The King’s Visit and the Roots of American Order
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The King’s Visit and the Roots of American Order

It may seem odd that the reigning English monarch is visiting the United States to celebrate the 250th anniversary of American independence. Yet as King Charles III acknowledged in his speech to a joint session of Congress, the ties binding the American Republic and the United Kingdom are stronger than any ill will lingering from the late unpleasantness of the Revolution. Perhaps the most remarkable thing about His Majesty’s speech is how he noted the ways that the constitutional vision of the American Founders is an inheritance of Western civilization through our British ancestors. “They carried with them, and carried forward, the great inheritance of the British Enlightenment—as well as the ideals which had an even deeper history in English common law and Magna Carta,” he said. “These roots run deep, and they are still vital.” While Charles acknowledged the real problems facing the English-speaking peoples, he averred that returning to those deep roots will sustain us. The wisdom at the heart of the King’s speech reflects the insights of a great American conservative thinker: Russell Kirk. In his 1974 “Roots of American Order”—written to commemorate the 200th anniversary of American independence—the Michigan writer also stressed the need to understand the common roots of British and American civilization. Like His Majesty, Dr. Kirk did not conceive of this legacy as some kind of narrow ethnic heritage, let alone a blood-and-soil nationalism. Rather, both men understand the West as a kind of spiritual inheritance. Kirk opened “The Roots of American Order” by defining his terms. “We can distinguish two sorts of roots, intertwined,” he wrote, “the roots of the moral order, of order in the soul; and the roots of the civil social order, of order in the republic.” Building on the work of political philosophers such as Simone Weil and Eric Voegelin, Kirk argued that institutions, customs, ideas, and culture all shaped who Americans are as a people. If we were to “freshen the colors of the picture” we have of American civilization, he went on to write, then we must look to the sources of those inheritances—specifically, in the four great cities of the West: Jerusalem, Athens, Rome, and London. From Jerusalem, Americans inherited a certain conception of the human person and his place in a divinely created order. The Hebrew Prophets were lawgivers who established certain moral principles that still help us discern right from wrong. And, of course, as Charles would say in the House of Representatives years after Kirk, “the Christian faith is a firm anchor and daily inspiration that guides us not only personally, but together as members of our community.” Without these religious roots, the Anglo-American conception of freedom would be altogether unintelligible. Only faith can truly sanction liberty. From Athens and Rome, Kirk argued Americans received a great philosophic heritage. The writings of Plato, Cicero, and other Greek and Roman sages represent the origin of liberal education. But, curiously, the Framers of the U.S. Constitution did not look to what Publius called in Federalist no. 9 the “petty republics of Greece and Italy” as models for the political forms of their new country. Instead, Kirk maintained, the Founders primarily took inspiration from British history. London may have been “the youngest of the four cities from which American order is drawn,” Kirk wrote, but it is the most influential. “America’s classical heritage, and in some sense even America’s Christian and Jewish heritage, crossed the Atlantic only after being transmuted by Britain’s historical experience,” he contended. From the Middle Ages to the Glorious Revolution, a conception of justice as the rule of law—not of men—emerged in the city on the Thames, working itself out as a series of limits on power and, ultimately, a mixed constitution. When English settlers came to North America seeking freedom and fortune, they replicated those free institutions on these shores. As Kirk put it: Of medieval London, few traces remain today: most of its fabric vanished in the Great Fire of the seventeenth century, and remnants were demolished after the First World War or effaced by German bombs in the Second World War. Even St. Paul’s is a neoclassical building on the medieval site of Ludgate Hill; even the famous river profile of the Parliament Houses is nineteenth-century Gothic. But the invisible London, the city of the rule of law, the city of enterprise and cultural diffusion, still overshadows New York and Washington. It is for this reason that Kirk could declare that the War for Independence was “a revolution not made, but prevented.” The American Founders were not attempting, as their would-be imitators in France tried later, to rip up the contract of eternal society and introduce modes and orders altogether new. Theirs was a revolution of memory, an attempt to defend ancient and natural liberties against the schemes of centralizing power. In that sense, Kirk argued, the Founders were doing their best to uphold the inheritance of London in an uncertain time. Or, as His Majesty charmingly put it, “The Founding Fathers were bold and imaginative rebels with a cause … By balancing contending forces and drawing strength in diversity, they united 13 disparate colonies to forge a nation on the revolutionary idea of ‘life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.’” Today, the English-speaking peoples on both sides of the Atlantic need a dose of that boldness and imagination to withstand the multiple crises we face. The United States and United Kingdom alike face the threats of foreign aggression and domestic decadence. As both Kirk and the King remind us, it is only by drawing on the common spiritual heritage of our two peoples—remembering our roots—that we might restore order in the commonwealth, and order in the soul. We publish a variety of perspectives. Nothing written here is to be construed as representing the views of The Daily Signal.

Trump Nominates Another Surgeon General Nominee
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Trump Nominates Another Surgeon General Nominee

President Donald Trump announced Thursday that he is withdrawing his surgeon general nomination for the second time. Trump announced the nomination of Dr. Nicole B. Saphier, a radiologist and director of breast imaging at Memorial Sloan Kettering Monmouth, replacing “Make America Healthy Again” nominee Dr. Casey Means. Before Means, Trump had nominated Dr. Janette Nesheiwat for the role before withdrawing her nomination. “I am pleased to announce that I am nominating Dr. Nicole B. Saphier to be the next SURGEON GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,” Trump wrote on TruthSocial. “Nicole is a STAR physician who has spent her career guiding women facing breast cancer through their diagnosis and treatment while tirelessly advocating to increase early cancer detection and prevention, while at the same time working with men and women on all other forms of cancer diagnoses and treatments.” “She is also an INCREDIBLE COMMUNICATOR, who makes complicated health issues more easily understood by all Americans,” Trump added. In a separate post, Trump slammed Chair of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, who held up Means’ nomination. The president said he hopes Louisianans vote Cassidy out of office. “For months, Senator Bill Cassidy (of the GREAT State of Louisiana!), a very disloyal person whose ‘TRUMP’ Endorsement got him elected, but later voted to impeach ‘President Trump’ on what has now proven to be a total Hoax and Scam, has stood in the way of Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s Nominee, Casey Means, for the important position of U.S. Surgeon General,” Trump said. Trump said he nominated Means, a “strong MAHA Warrior,” at the recommendation of Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy. “Nevertheless, despite Senator Cassidy’s intransigence and political games, Casey will continue to fight for MAHA on the many important Health issues facing our Country, such as the rising childhood disease epidemic, increased autism rates, poor nutrition, over-medicalization, and researching the root causes of infertility, and many other difficult medical problems,” he said. “Casey, thank you for your service to our Nation!” Trump told The Daily Signal on March 29 he was considering withdrawing Means’ nomination. “Something like that would be possible,” he said. BREAKING: One month after @POTUS told @DailySignal it's possible he would withdraw Casey Means for surgeon general, he announced he's nominated Dr. Nicole B. Saphier instead. "I am pleased to announce that I am nominating Dr. Nicole B. Saphier to be the next SURGEON GENERAL OF… https://t.co/0cXaCmBkVe— Elizabeth Troutman Mitchell (@TheElizMitchell) April 30, 2026 However, the White House stood by her nomination. “Dr. Casey Means has spent her entire career as an entrepreneur, bestselling author, and researcher bringing attention to America’s chronic disease epidemic and how our healthcare system is failing the American people,” press secretary Karoline Leavitt said at the time. The Southern Baptist Convention raised concerns about Means’ past use of illicit drugs, as detailed in her book “Good Energy,” and her lack of commitment in her confirmation hearings to limit the abortion pill. Means stood out as one of the few public figures willing to take a stance against the birth control pill, saying it is prescribed “like candy” and reflects a “disrespect of things that create life.”

House Passes DHS Funding, Clears Hurdle to Ending Shutdown
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House Passes DHS Funding, Clears Hurdle to Ending Shutdown

Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, R-La., has succeeded in rallying his slim majority around controversial measures involving surveillance, immigration enforcement funding, and agricultural policy, successfully led passage of the bills on Thursday. The House voted by voice Thursday to pass the Senate’s measure to fund the Department of Homeland Security, sending the bill to President Donald Trump’s desk to end a 75-shutdown. The House will recess after Thursday for a week. On Wednesday night, after days of struggling to come to a deal, the House passed a resolution unlocking the process of budget reconciliation, allowing Republicans to fund immigration enforcement without needing Democrat votes in the Senate. In order to do so, Republican leadership had to overcome some rank-and-file members’ complaints about a piecemeal approach to funding the Department of Homeland Security, in which Republicans would fund the agency’s non-immigration responsibilities in a separate bipartisan bill. Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, an opponent of the piecemeal approach, explained to reporters why he did not demand a recorded vote on Thursday.“If there was a vote, I would’ve voted no,” he said. “But we weren’t going to win that vote, so we decided to let it pass by voice vote.”Roy has argued that leaving immigration funding outside of the typical bipartisan process risks a partisan targeting of funding in the future. Final Touches House Republicans also overcame bitter disagreements in passing a three-year extension of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.  A faction of Republicans had for weeks demanded major reforms to the espionage program to prevent the surveillance of American citizens. Leadership ultimately won them over with warrant reforms, as well as a prohibition on the development of a central bank digital currency—something privacy hawks have long argued could be used as a potential surveillance tool. The future of the House FISA bill is uncertain in the Senate, and the surveillance authority expires at midnight. Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., has said the House’s FISA bill is “dead on arrival” in the Senate due to the central bank digital currency ban. Senate Republicans are attempting to advance a 45-day FISA extension. The House would have to fast-track this bill under a process known as “suspension of the rules” with a two-thirds vote in order to meet the deadline. This is usually forbidden on Thursdays and Fridays but the House rules committee, a leadership-controlled panel, voted to make an exception this week in a resolution that passed on Thursday. Johnson said after the DHS vote that the Senate should pass the House’s FISA bill to “check the last box,” saying they “don’t seem to have another alternative.”  Farm Bill Johnson’s other success was passing a massive farm bill by a 224-200 margin to revamp agricultural policy and provide assistance to farmers ahead of the midterm elections. Several members initially objected to elements in the bill, prompting Republicans to set up several amendment votes on subjects of disagreement before the farm bill ultimately passed. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, R-Fla., for example, objected to language blocking state regulations of pesticide companies, and her amendment changing this provision passed 280-142. Midwestern Republicans, hoping to score a win with corn farmers in their districts ahead of midterms, demanded that leadership work with them to build a regulatory environment more friendly to ethanol-blended gasoline, which is often derived from corn. Thune has indicated the Senate wishes to proceed with its own farm bill. Related PostsVital House Surveillance, Farm, Immigration Bills Stall in CommitteeThe House of Representatives’ attempt to pass legislation on foreign surveillance, homeland security funding, and agricultural policy on a tight deadline has already screeched to a halt, with Republican intraparty disagreement on all fronts. The House Rules Committee, a leadership-controlled panel that determines the conditions of debate for bills on the floor, went into recess…Will the House Do as the Senate Tells It on Reconciliation?In the wee hours of Thursday morning, the Senate adopted a budget framework to provide funds for immigration enforcement that Democrats have denied since February. But getting that framework through the House in order to ultimately send a bill to the president’s desk may be a challenge. Senate Republicans are pursuing a two-track approach—a party-line…2 Democrats Side With Republicans to Confirm Mullin for DHS SecretaryThe Senate has voted to confirm Markwayne Mullin, the senator from Oklahoma, as the new secretary of the Department of Homeland Security. The upper chamber voted to confirm Mullin 54 to 45 on Monday evening. Two Democrats, Sens. John Fetterman, D-Pa., and Martin Heinrich, D-N.M., joined 52 Republicans by voting in favor of President Donald…

Republicans Risk Losing Their Strongest Issue: Immigration
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Republicans Risk Losing Their Strongest Issue: Immigration

Brand new battleground polling shows that immigration topics remain the clearest and strongest issue set for all candidates heading into November’s midterm elections. Despite persistent opposition from legacy media and business interests, voters continue to rally to the America First vision of sovereignty, restrained immigration, and robust enforcement of our nation’s laws. But predictably, the chattering Washington class of political dinosaurs insists that the GOP surrender on this one macro issue that is clearly working. Beltway GOP insiders seem intent on snatching defeat from the jaws of victory. Here is the harsh current reality: The GOP faces a very tough November, and my latest Arizona poll underscores that challenge. In a state President Trump won by more than five points, his job approval rating now stands at -16%, with 39% approval and 55% disapproval. This mirrors my last two Wisconsin polls, which show Trump at -15% in that battleground state. Both swing-state polls show that the war with Iran is unpopular. Right now, only 31% of Arizona voters believe the war is a “net positive” for America, while 51% say they are more worried about higher prices, and only 20% believe those costs are necessary to keep America safe. But despite the unpopularity of the war, Trump’s overall approval has not budged compared to my prewar polling. So the economy remains the foremost concern of voters, who continue to struggle and now largely blame the governing GOP. Of all available policy tools to improve the prosperity of the masses right now, the single most effective is immigration. In order to grow real wages—meaning pay adjusted for the cost of living—immigration provides leverage on both fronts. First, removing millions of illegal workers—where President Trump has made significant progress—raises the pay of American citizens in the workforce, especially blue-collar strivers. Second, removing illegal immigrants from the country reduces the strain on resources like housing, providing needed relief to consumers struggling with high prices. Voters in Arizona grasp the efficacy of immigration enforcement and overwhelmingly back deportations. Specifically, a supermajority of 66% say that state and local police should fully cooperate with federal authorities in the Trump deportation agenda. Even 45% of Kamala Harris voters agree on this point. Within the large Hispanic population of Arizona, a majority—52%—support this law enforcement effort on immigration. That number is particularly crucial, because Latino support for Trump has cratered since he took office, with only 28% of Arizona Hispanics expressing positive job approval for the president in this poll. But in the face of common sense and sound electoral politics, establishment politicians like Rep. Maria Salazar, R-Fla., insist on pushing a so-called “Dignity” agenda to allow millions of illegal immigrants to remain permanently in the U.S. Despite their claims to the contrary, such a policy retreat represents mass de facto amnesty—a surrender on the foundational issue of the patriotic populist movement. In addition, such a retreat on immigration would amount to a massive political surrender that would dispirit the base and abandon the most popular and effective element of the current conservative agenda. So, D.C. Republicans: stop catering to a small cadre of donor-class interests who clamor for a bygone era of porous borders and managed decline. These are not the early 2000s, and George W. Bush is not our leader. Americans demand sovereignty and recognize that immigration control provides a pathway to a safer, more prosperous, and more cohesive society. Stick to principles—and stick to winning politics. We publish a variety of perspectives. Nothing written here is to be construed as representing the views of The Daily Signal.

Cousin Marriage Ban Could Soon Hit the US
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Cousin Marriage Ban Could Soon Hit the US

FIRST ON THE DAILY SIGNAL — Rep. Keith Self has introduced legislation that would effectively outlaw cousin marriages by denying federal recognition and benefits to such unions. “Cousin marriage—which is permitted under Sharia—is fundamentally incompatible with American culture and values. It should not be allowed anywhere in our country,” the Texas Republican told The Daily Signal. “The vast majority of states have already banned this third‑world practice. It’s time for Congress to finish the job and enact a nationwide prohibition.” Marriage between close family members is legal, with few or no restrictions, in 18 states and the District of Columbia. Self argues that blood‑related marriages are common in certain ethnic and cultural groups, with rates reaching as high as 40%. “The expectation of assimilation into Western values includes accepting America’s cultural marriage standards,” Self said. If enacted, the Consanguineous Marriage Prohibition Act would deny federal benefit recognition of marriages between individuals who are first cousins or more closely related. The bill would alter benefit calculations under Social Security, Supplemental Security Income, Medicare, Medicaid, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families. It would also affect federal employees’ life and health insurance benefits. The legislation would not alter broader legal definitions of marriage. In a press release shared with The Daily Signal, Self said cousin marriages pose serious health risks to children born from such unions. “Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) studies have shown that children of these marriages have twice the incidence of birth defects, and the risk of stillbirths and infant deaths is increased by 50%,” the release said. “Throughout their lives, these children experience learning disabilities, health issues, and reduced life expectancy.” Self’s proposal comes after allegations that Rep. Ilhan Omar, D‑Minn., married her cousin to obtain immigration benefits and entry into the United States. Omar has denied the accusation, calling it a “ridiculous lie.” In January, Rep. Nancy Mace, R‑S.C., subpoenaed Omar and her alleged “brother‑husband” as part of an effort to determine whether Omar committed immigration fraud or violated federal law. “If these allegations are true, they raise grave concerns involving potential marriage fraud, immigration fraud, and violations of federal and state law,” Mace said at the time. “No one, no matter how politically protected, should be above the law.” Omar did not respond to The Daily Signal’s request for comment.