Citizen v. Alien: The Loyalty Test Behind the Applause
By Tony Pentimalli
When Donald Trump told lawmakers to stand if they believed “the first duty of the American government is to protect American citizens, not illegal aliens,” he wasn’t explaining policy. He was setting a trap.
Stand up, and you look like you’re defending Americans. Stay seated, and you get painted as someone who cares more about “illegal aliens” than your own country. It forced a public choice with only one safe answer.
The sentence sounds simple. Of course a government protects its citizens. Nobody serious argues with that. But the way he framed it turns two words into weapons: citizen and illegal.
The federal government does not serve only passport holders. It serves green card holders who pay taxes and raise families. It serves students on visas. It serves refugees admitted legally. It serves people waiting for their asylum cases to move through court. It serves millions of American-born children whose parents are not citizens.
When the Constitution talks about due process and equal protection, it uses the word “persons,” not “citizens.” That was intentional. The government’s power comes with a duty to protect the people under its authority. If leaders narrow that duty to a smaller group, everyone else stands on weaker ground.
Some people watching that moment believe Democrats should have stood. They argue that protecting citizens should never be controversial. That reaction makes sense at first glance. But the problem wasn’t the word “protect.” It was the framing that said protection applies to one group and not another.
Standing would not have been a vote for public safety. It would have been an endorsement of a false choice - the idea that government protection is selective. Refusing to stand wasn’t about opposing citizens. It was about rejecting a setup that turns neighbors into competitors.
“Illegal” doesn’t describe a type of person. It describes a legal situation, and immigration law is complicated. Some people overstay visas, which is a civil violation. Some apply for asylum and are allowed to remain while their case is pending. Some lose status because of paperwork or delays.
Rolling all of those situations into “illegal alien” erases the differences. It makes it easier to stop seeing neighbors and start seeing a category.
The most important word in Trump’s sentence wasn’t “citizen” or “illegal.” It was “not.” Protect citizens not illegal aliens. That framing turns safety into a competition and teaches people to believe that if someone else is protected, they must be losing something.
Government doesn’t work that way. If a fire breaks out, firefighters don’t check immigration papers before they go in. If a crime happens, police protect whoever lives there. Public authority applies to the people within it because that’s how a country stays stable.
Undocumented immigrants pay billions every year in state and local taxes. Many pay into Social Security and Medicare even though they will never collect benefits. They pay sales taxes. They pay property taxes through rent. They work in farms, kitchens, construction sites, warehouses, and nursing homes. The economy relies on that labor whether politicians admit it or not.
Describing these families as if they only take and never contribute isn’t honest.
That moment in the chamber wasn’t about solving immigration. It was about drawing a line on live television and showing who stands on which side of it. Authoritarian leaders rely on public loyalty tests. They divide people into the approved and the suspect, and over time, citizens get used to the idea that protection depends on belonging to the right group.
When people get used to that idea, real damage follows. Families in mixed-status homes stop reporting crimes because they’re afraid of drawing attention. Workers don’t report wage theft or unsafe conditions because they think no one will protect them. Public health officials struggle to contain outbreaks because people are scared to seek help. Trust between neighbors weakens. Once government protection feels selective, cooperation breaks down. A country becomes less safe, not more.
In living rooms across the country, American citizen children sat next to noncitizen parents and heard the President suggest that one of them deserved protection more than the other. That conversation doesn’t end when the speech does. It shapes how a child understands “us” and how a parent understands “home.”
The line works because it makes a complicated problem feel simple. Immigration law is confusing. The courts are backed up. Wages are tight. Housing is expensive. It’s easier to point at a group of people than to confront deeper failures.
Once a country accepts the idea that some people inside its borders fall outside the government’s duty to protect, that idea doesn’t stay contained. If leaders can shrink that obligation once, they can shrink it again.
The Constitution ties government power to rules that apply to persons, not just favored groups. That guardrail only holds if people insist on it.
That standing moment was about getting the country comfortable with a smaller definition of who deserves protection.
If we get used to that, we may forever loose our country.
The applause was the warning.
*Tony Pentimalli is a political analyst and commentator fighting for democracy, economic justice, and social equity. Follow him for sharp analysis and hard-hitting critiques on Facebook and BlueSky
@tonywriteshere.bsky.social








2/25/26






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