When President Donald Trump officially designated eight major drug cartels as foreign terrorist organizations earlier this year, the political left and their allies in the corporate media reacted with predictable hysteria. Pundits warned of escalation. Democrats cried foul. And Washington insiders scrambled to figure out how far Trump could really go.
Now they have their answer.
Utah Senator Mike Lee just handed President Trump a constitutional tool so powerful—and so rarely used—that it has been dormant since the early days of the Republic. And it’s sending shockwaves through the establishment.
Lee this week unveiled legislation that revives a war power most Americans have only read about in history books. The proposal doesn’t merely expand executive authority—it reaches back to the very founding of the nation.
The bill is titled the Cartel Marque and Reprisal Reauthorization Act, and its purpose is clear: allow the President of the United States to authorize private citizens to directly target cartel assets and personnel operating outside U.S. borders.
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