Saturday, July 4, 2026

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A legal immigrant from Trinidad who became a U.S. citizen after nearly a decade-long process told Fox News Digital that birth tourism and illegal immigration are a "slap in the face" to those who came to America the right way.

Kris Ramsingh, a Virginia business owner who immigrated in 2006 and became a citizen in 2015, said his own experience becoming an American shaped his support for President Donald Trump's immigration policies.

"When you see that people come across the border, whether it's [to] have a baby for an anchor, or come across to border and get free healthcare, [or] free school, it's really a slap in the face to the people who have worked really hard to come into this country the legal way," he told Fox News Digital in an interview Thursday.

Unlike those who enter the country illegally, Ramsingh said he was required to satisfy a series of federal immigration requirements before becoming a U.S. citizen.

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As part of the legal immigration process, federal authorities required Ramsingh to provide proof of certain vaccines, personal documentation, a criminal background check and proof of a bank account to demonstrate he would not become a ward of the state.

"America doesn't owe us anything," Ramsingh said of legal immigrants like himself. "Our government here doesn't owe us anything. We have the privilege of coming into this country where it’s a holiday visa or for school."

Ramsingh said the week of Independence Day also marks the anniversary of his and his wife's arrival in the U.S. in 2006 with just $300 and a few suitcases.

"I have lived in Roanoke all of those 20 years since," he said from his Dominion Custom Upholstery business not too far from the city’s famed Mill Mountain Star.

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As Americans prepare to celebrate Independence Day, Ramsingh said he feels a special sense of pride in the American flag.

He recounted living in his home country in 1990 when Muslim insurgents carried out a coup and shot Prime Minister ANR Robinson while taking officials hostage.

"When we saw the red, white, and blue [of American] soldiers coming into the country, we knew we were safe. We knew at that point that America had our back. And America has had a lot of countries’ back over the years," he said, commenting that — having experienced such a situation firsthand — he is troubled by other countries that demand America’s assistance but go back to resenting the U.S. after they’ve been helped.

Ramsingh said that experience shaped his appreciation for the United States and its role around the world.

After immigrating to the United States, Ramsingh founded Dominion Custom Upholstery 13 years ago and later launched another company focused on boatworks and interior repairs.

He also recently founded Dominion Project International, a missionary organization through which he travels to India, Africa and the Caribbean to share the Gospel while providing potable water and medical supplies to people in need.

"The American Dream is that you can try something — you can work hard and try and if it doesn't work out you can you can pick up and try again," he added.

"The flag represents peace [and] hope as we’re getting ready to celebrate Saturday, the Fourth of July, and it means so much to me — it means freedom."

Since becoming a U.S. citizen, Ramsingh said he feels a special sense of security and pride whenever he returns from missionary trips abroad.

"There’s a sense of ‘I’m back on U.S. soil; I’m home,’" he said, whether landing in Washington, D.C., Miami or New York.

"That feeling is so great and it really bothers me to see Americans and foreigners coming into this country and saying that they hate America," he said.

"I think if you hated that much, you should just leave — there is no need for you to be here."

Asked about critics’ claims that Trump is anti-immigrant, Ramsingh rejected that characterization.

"He’s not anti-immigrant. Republicans are not anti-immigrant — we just want them to go through the process of doing it legally; coming in legally."

"During the Biden administration. When he opened that border — we're anti-invasion, we are not anti-immigrant. That was an invasion."

Ramsingh acknowledged that some of the personal stories surrounding deportations are difficult to watch, but said those situations stem from years of lax enforcement of U.S. immigration laws.

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"I came from a third-world country. My missions are in third-world countries. I see how these people live. I understand why they want to come to America. I understand the ‘why’," he said.

"I would say Trump is not against immigration. He just wants to see it done right. And again, Donald Trump and our government doesn't owe immigrants anything. We have the privilege of being here. It's a privilege. It's not a right."

Fox News Digital's Hannah Brennan and Kiera McDonald contributed to this report.



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Democratic lawmakers said they believed the U.S. is still an extraordinary country despite expressing disagreements with President Donald Trump when asked by Fox News Digital if they were proud to be American citizens.

"The freedoms that we have and the fact that anyone should be able to get ahead for them and their family based on the laws we have every now and then — in general, it's sound," Rep. Mark Pocan, D-Wisc., said.

The answers, which came ahead of the country’s 250th Independence Day celebration, highlight the deep distrust Democrats have of the administration’s leadership even as they expressed confidence in principles that have made U.S. prosperity possible.

Just one, Rep. Al Green, D-Texas, declined to expand on why he was proud to be an American.

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"I am very proud to tell you that impeachment is an option to remove a reckless, ruthless, lawless president," Green answered when asked if he was proud to be an American.

"I’m proud that it exists," Green added.

Rep. Lloyd Doggett, D-Texas, echoed his thinking.

"I believe Americans are ready to defend our democracy and oppose authoritarianism so that we can celebrate our 251st birthday in this country instead of turning all power over to a would-be king," Doggett said.

Despite his disagreements with the Trump administration, Doggett clarified that his views were distinct from his feelings about the nation itself.

"We’re the greatest country on earth. We’re innovative, we’re smart, we make sure that we promote our values, our liberties and justice and freedom. We’re always trying to perfect our union, but at the same time, we were the great experiment of democracy and it’s been a rousing success," Doggett said.

Other Democrats, like Rep. Shri Thanedar, D-Mich., agreed with U.S. exceptionalism.

"This is a great country. You know, we are a country of immigrants. Immigrants have contributed so much to our country, and you know this is the greatest country on earth. I am so proud to call myself an American citizen, although there are some concerns with the new administration," Thanedar said.

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Thanedar, who was born in India, immigrated to the United States in 1979.

For their own part, Republicans, who readily affirmed their pride in the country, articulated that they believed the founding ideas were the reason for the country’s success.

Rep. Glenn Grothman, R-Wisc., said he believed the Constitution had given citizens the latitude to thrive.

"I guess our Constitution and all the freedoms we have that other countries don't have, which results in us being so much wealthier than other countries — not that that's the main thing. But you look at your average American with a front yard and backyard, they don't even have that in Western Europe, they don't have that in Israel, they have it in other top countries. We've got it here in the United States," Grothman said.

"So, I think the combination between the material wealth which impresses you and a Christian nation which is also so tremendous."

PUSH TO OUST TRUMP EXPOSES CRACKS AMONG DEMOCRATS ON STRATEGY, TIMING

Rep. Cory Mills, R-Fla., said he believes it’s that success that has made Americans proud and zealous for protecting its interests.

"We’re a nation who’s willing to understand peace through strength. And we’re a nation that has been willing to go ahead and pledge our lives to keep the freedoms that we have here that no other nation like ours has seen," Mills said.



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Friday, July 3, 2026

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Can Americans come together over the next week to celebrate the nation’s 250th anniversary? With the country seemingly split into irreconcilable, and increasingly violent, camps, storm clouds darken the summer commemorations. Those worrying that the Semiquincentennial will be a giant bust should look no further than the Bicentennial. Plagued by similar fears, the Bicentennial turned into the biggest party the country had ever seen. Today, Americans should take heart and party like it’s 1976.

America’s two-hundredth anniversary came either at the worst possible moment or just in time. The previous 13 years had been among the most violent and disruptive since the Great Depression, possibly even the Civil War. The upheavals of the Civil Rights Movement had been punctuated by the tragic assassinations of President John F. Kennedy, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., and presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy. America’s postwar consensus had spectacularly disintegrated barely two decades after the resounding victory in World War II.

To many, America had fundamentally changed. After the assassinations and riots, and the lies of Vietnam and Watergate, the country had become more cynical and distrusting of government, the elites, and big business. As a Boston Globe columnist wrote, the great issue in the 1976 presidential campaign would be "to restore confidence of the American people in their government and themselves," short of which he feared the country would remain "purposeless, rudderless, powerless."

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In a country at once exhausted and divided, it could well be questioned whether Americans would celebrate or jeer the Bicentennial of the Declaration of Independence. Overwhelmingly, they celebrated.

As the jubilee approached, Bicentennial fever swept the country. A torrent of words on the Declaration and the Revolution poured off the presses, most with praise, many also arguing that America still struggled to live up to the promises of her founding document.

Over 12,566 towns and cities participated in the Bicentennial Communities project, renovating parks and historic buildings or building new community centers. Over seven million Americans visited the Freedom Train, which left Wilmington, Del., on April 1, 1975, and crisscrossed the country before ending its run on Dec. 31, 1976. As many as 10 million tourists toured Independence Hall and saw the Liberty Bell in Philadelphia. Queen Elizabeth II made a triumphal state visit, landing first in Philadelphia.

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Against all expectations, the Bicentennial turned into both the greatest patriotic celebration and the greatest sales event in American history. Decades before e-commerce made buying with a click ubiquitous, Bicentennial hats, shirts, flags, medallions, coins, mini–Liberty Bells, commemorative booklets, posters, pillow covers, bed linens and pewter engravings sold by the millions through mail-order or catalogs.

Not surprisingly, Washington, D.C., was the center of the celebrations. Over 1.2 million people viewed the Declaration and Constitution at the National Archives over the course of 1976, while on July 2, the Archives opened its doors for a marathon seventy-six-hour "vigil," during which over 10,000 visitors stood in lines more than three hours long to gaze up at the priceless parchment.

Two days later, a street party took over Constitution Avenue in front of the National Archives, as 8,000 people gathered for a reading of the Declaration, heard patriotic songs and then joined in the cutting of a six-foot-tall, multilayered birthday cake.

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On the morning of July 4, famed composer Leonard Bernstein read the Declaration before a crowd in Manhattan’s Battery Park. At 2 p.m. Eastern Time, bells rang out across the nation for two minutes, from church steeples, town halls and firehouses. Parades large and small snaked through Main Streets across the nation as people celebrated with barbecues, sports activities and bands. That evening over a million people packed the National Mall and lined the Potomac to witness a gigantic pyrotechnics display depicting eras in America’s past.

The Bicentennial celebrations did not magically solve all of America’s problems or create eternal fellowship. There were protests and condemnations of the country. However, the vast majority of Americans showed both pride and some badly needed perspective on their history. As an opinion poll taken by the Gallup Organization in June 1976 revealed, 77% of respondents felt that "we had succeeded over these 200 years in achieving the ideals for which this country was founded."

This year, away from the drama in Washington, social media anger and media sensationalism, it’s likely many Americans will feel the same way about their country’s 250th. There is a "Freedom Plane" currently touring the country, and exhibitions at the National Archives, Library of Congress and Smithsonian Institution, as well as at local museums and presidential libraries are drawing thousands of Americans to view artifacts from the country’s past. A new bevy of books on the founding, the Revolutionary War and the Declaration of Independence all are being published, and documentaries are being streamed.

Despite the anger manifested online and in the streets, despite rising incivility and political cage-match rhetoric, and even despite assassination attempts by a handful of deranged individuals, the vast majority of the country goes about its daily life peacefully. Debate and even heated argument about the country’s past are part of our tradition, not signs of imminent civil war.

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Our economic problems are serious, our politicians often incompetent, and our schools failing, among other concerns. Yet we need to remember why millions still come to these shores, why opportunity here is still open for the taking, and why very few Americans would trade life here for political systems in China, Russia or even most of Europe.

As America reaches 250, we remain a great nation, even as we strive to fix our ills and create a more perfect Union. If that task remains forever unfinished, it does not delegitimize the country’s existence or our achievements, but calls us to recommit to the principles of the Declaration. Most of us, I am willing to bet, would agree deep down with the words of the Memphis Tri-State Defender, a Black newspaper, written in 1976: "this land is the only land that we have to live in, and most importantly, few Black Americans want to leave it for some other place."

So, don’t worry, be happy, and embrace the "Spirit of ’76."



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Lawmakers on Capitol Hill had split reactions to the Supreme Court’s ruling to strike down President Donald Trump’s bid to end birthright citizenship, further allowing children born in the United States to be recognized as U.S. citizens.

"It's a terrible decision," Rep. Byron Donalds, R-Fla., told Fox News Digital.

"Regulate folks before they come in — in terms of not coming here just to have a baby and leave," Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., said.

"In terms of the immigration process coming in, there should be regulation. Not that once you're born here that we're going to denaturalize you," he continued.

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The case, which left many Republicans and Democrats divided, challenged Trump’s executive order to detach birthright citizenship from the 14th Amendment. Most Democrats who Fox News Digital spoke to argued that if the ruling had gone the other way, it would have been considered unconstitutional.

"I think they got it right," Rep. Christian Menefee, D-Texas said. "The Supreme Court said that the Constitution says what it says. That if anybody even has a question about what the 14th Amendment says, I think it's a little embarrassing. So I'm glad they got it right."

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"I believe in the Constitution," Rep. James Clyburn, D-S.C., said when asked about the ruling.

"The Constitution is the Constitution. If you don't like the Constitution, you can try to change it," Rep. Seth Magaziner, D-R.I., said. "But honestly, I think we've got much bigger problems as a country than Americans trying to live their lives as birthright citizens."

The 6-3 decision highlights a significant loss for Trump’s immigration agenda as he has criticized birthright citizenship as a "magnet for illegal immigration."

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"I think the president has an obsession with immigrants in this country," Rep. Sarah Elfreth, D-Md., said. "He's hell bent on making it as uncomfortable as possible. We've seen that time and again with ICE, we've seen this with an attack on the 14th Amendment."

Justice Clarence Thomas, Justice Neil Gorsuch and Justice Samuel Alito were the three to dissent — arguing the 14th Amendment does not guarantee birthright citizenship to all children born to parents who are unlawfully and temporarily in the country. Alito cited that the ruling fails to recognize the rise of "birth tourism," the concept that foreigners come to America just to give birth, potentially opening the door to national security threats.

Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., and Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., declined to comment on the ruling to Fox News Digital.

"Americans should be happy, because the Constitution means more than one guy’s opinion," Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., said.



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Thursday, July 2, 2026

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An appeals court on Thursday ruled that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement cannot detain immigrants for more than 90 days without giving them an opportunity to seek release on bond while their deportation proceedings are pending.

In a 2-1 ruling, the Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals sided against the administration, potentially affecting thousands of immigrants who have been detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in states within the court 's jurisdiction, including Texas and Louisiana.

Judge Leslie Southwick, writing for the majority, said the U.S. Supreme Court found in 2001 that the due process clause protects everyone, including two Mexican citizens and one Honduran whose cases were at issue in this case.

"It is part of the historic majesty of this long-ago founding charter that it makes no exceptions in providing basic rights to those within our boundaries, including a right to be heard when personal liberty is taken," Southwick wrote.

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In a dissenting opinion, Judge Cory Wilson said the majority "marginalizes the Constitution's express grant of plenary authority over immigration matters to Congress."

A different panel of the same court had previously been the first in the country to side with the administration's novel interpretation of a federal immigration statute allowing mandatory detention of non-citizens living in the U.S.

However, that ruling in February did not address whether the due process protections of the U.S. Constitution's Fifth Amendment require giving the immigrants an opportunity to seek release on bond by appearing before an immigration judge.

Rebecca Cassler, a lawyer for the migrants at the American Immigration Council, said in a statement to Reuters that the group is "delighted that the panel recognized the core constitutional principle that the due process clause does not allow the government to lock them away indefinitely."

The Department of Homeland Security said in a statement to the outlet that it disagrees with the ruling, adding that it is "confident in its legal position regarding mandatory detention."

Fox News Digital reached out to the department for comment.

Last week, the administration had asked the Supreme Court to review a similar ruling by a different appeals court.

Federal immigration law states that "applicants for admission" ​to the country are ​subject to mandatory detention ⁠while their cases proceed in immigration courts, making them ineligible for bond hearings.

BIDEN JUDGE OVERRULED ON KEY TRUMP IMMIGRATION POLICY

Despite a long-standing interpretation of immigration law, the Department of Homeland Security claimed last year that non-citizens who are already in the U.S. qualify as "applicants ​for admission" subject to mandatory detention, rather than only people arriving at the border.

The Board of Immigration Appeals, which is part of the Justice Department, announced in September ​that it had adopted the Department of Homeland Security's interpretation.

Immigration judges employed by the ​department began ordering mandatory detention across the country.

Reuters contributed to this report.



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Two hundred and fifty years ago, a band of visionaries bet everything on a radical idea: that ordinary people, given liberty and opportunity, could build a great and innovative nation. As we approach America's 250th birthday, it's time to make another bold bet on our workforce and the next generation.

Idaho-based Micron Technology has committed more than $200 billion to expand semiconductor manufacturing and R&D right here in the United States. One of the largest private investments in the country’s history, it will generate more than 90,000 U.S. jobs.

But Micron's investment in America never stopped at fabs. Micron has more than $300 million planned nationally over the next 20 years for education, community, veteran and workforce development programs. Micron announced today that it is once again leading the way for the private sector by committing $250 million to seed Trump Accounts for 1 million American children, in addition to matching our employees’ contributions to these accounts.

HERE'S HOW MUCH TRUMP ACCOUNT BALANCES COULD GROW OVER TIME

These tax-advantaged savings vehicles, passed by Congress and signed into law by President Trump, help parents, guardians and other donors invest in families’ futures. Micron is putting real money behind them with two new programs. This investment — both an employee benefit and a community initiative — is the largest corporate commitment of its kind.

First, an employee match. Micron employs more than 10,000 Americans, and starting now, current and future team members who open Trump Accounts for their children will receive a company match of up to $1,000 per child. After contributing $1,000 of their own, a Micron team member with one newborn child could receive an additional $1,000 match from Micron, combined with the government's $1,000 seed contribution. This collective $3,000 in tax-advantaged dollars could, based on historical market averages, grow to more than $20,000 by the time that child turns 18.

Second, community seed funding. In communities where Micron operates and in counties with median incomes of less than $150,000, families who open a Trump Account for their child will receive a one-time $250 deposit per child from Micron. These are communities in Idaho, New York, Virginia, California, Colorado, Minnesota and Texas — places where hardworking Americans are constructing the fabs and engineering the chips that serve as the foundation of AI in data centers, smartphones, PCs and consumer electronics, automotive technology and several other markets. Micron’s investment in our communities is aimed at reaching up to 1 million children.

The global AI boom is driving unprecedented demand for Micron's advanced memory and storage technology, and the company is expanding production rapidly. Every medical device screening for cancer, every system predicting weather patterns to save lives, every tool helping farmers forecast crop yields and optimize irrigation, every vehicle getting safer on the road, and every smartphone running on-device AI will depend on chips of the type Micron is building right here in America. 

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The company’s U.S. investment of more than $200 billion comes as AI has made American-made semiconductors more critical than at any point in history. President Trump's push to onshore chip manufacturing created the conditions for companies like Micron to advance U.S. economic and national security through domestic semiconductor supply chains and to reinvest in American communities at a historic scale.

Micron's chips power AI, and AI is driving our growth — growth that is creating tens of thousands of American jobs in communities across the country. And now it’s supporting Trump Accounts for children in Boise, Syracuse and beyond. That is American business at its finest.

Micron’s investment proves what we have always known: The private sector is ready to amplify public initiatives that help build prosperity from the ground up..

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By investing in the next generation of American inventors, engineers, technicians, construction workers, craftspeople and entrepreneurs, Micron’s commitment builds on the founding spirit of this nation. The children who benefit from these accounts today could be the ones designing the breakthroughs that keep America ahead of the global competition tomorrow. The chips we build today will help build the futures of America’s children and tomorrow’s workforce.

More than $200 billion in American manufacturing. $250 million for American children. $250 per child. In America's 250th year. That symmetry is no accident.

I invite every American company to follow this lead. The Trump Account is the vehicle. The opportunity is now. Years from now, when a young American opens that account and sees how it’s grown, he or she will know somebody believed in him or her.

That is the America worth building for the next 250 years.



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Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche on Wednesday rejected California Gov. Gavin Newsom's claims that the Justice Department is politically targeting him, saying the governor's assertions are not "grounded in fact."

Blanche responded to comments made by Newsom, who said last month that the Justice Department is investigating him and his wife, Jennifer Siebel Newsom, under orders from President Donald Trump.

While Blanche declined to comment on any ongoing investigations, he dismissed the governor's claims.

GAVIN NEWSOM CLAIMS TRUMP ORDERED DOJ PROBE TARGETING HIM AND HIS WIFE

"The only thing I'll say about what he chose to do and what he chose to say is, I'm not sure his words are in any way grounded in fact," Blanche said during a news conference.

"He'd have to address that," Blanche added.

Newsom claimed June 15 that Trump had directed the Justice Department to investigate him and his wife in an effort to undermine a potential White House campaign.

The California governor has described the investigation as a politically motivated "fishing expedition" by Trump's DOJ, saying he and his wife have "nothing to hide." Newsom has also argued the inquiry is aimed at him because he is considering a presidential run, saying, "To get me, he's coming after my wife."

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"Donald Trump isn’t just coming after me because of my mean Tweets. He’s coming after me because I am considering running for President," Newsom said. "Because he hates that I’ve consistently called him out – over and over again – for his lies and deceit. Donald Trump is simply the most corrupt President in American history."

Blanche also rejected Newsom's broader characterization of the situation.

"He can choose to say whatever he thinks helps him," Blanche said. "It doesn't make it true."

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Sources previously told Fox News the investigation has been ongoing since 2025 and is based on whistleblower complaints related to Newsom and his wife's personal finances. The matter is being handled by the U.S. Attorney's Office in Sacramento.

Federal sources confirmed to Fox News there are investigations involving Jennifer Siebel Newsom, but Fox News has not learned of any federal investigation directly targeting Gov. Newsom himself.

The Justice Department has not publicly confirmed any investigation involving Newsom or his wife.

Jennifer Siebel Newsom is a documentary filmmaker who runs The Representation Project, a nonprofit organization that seeks to advance feminism through media production. Fox News Digital previously reported the charity has faced "pay-for-play" allegations, with critics claiming corporations with business interests in California donated to the organization in an effort to gain influence with Newsom.

"There are clearly no boundaries to what Donald Trump will do to get his way or to challenge those who get in his way. This is not presidential behavior, and the Governor and I will continue to speak truth to power because the American people deserve so much more," Jennifer Siebel Newsom said in a previous statement to Fox News.

Following Blanche's remarks Wednesday, the governor's office posted a meme on social media with the caption, "Why you always lyin."

The governor's press office also wrote, "Trump goons know that it’s not a crime to lie to a reporter."

Fox News Digital has reached out to Newsom's office for additional comment.

Fox News Digital's Bonny Chu and Robert Schmad contributed to this report.



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