Moreno’s bombshell hits like a political earthquake. A hardline “loyalty test” that could force Melania and Barron Trump to choose which country they belong to. One passport. One flag. Or lose everything. Allies are stunned. Lawyers are scrambling. And the Trump family’s carefully guarded status may be far more fragile than anyone imag
Bernie Moreno’s “Exclusive Citizenship Act of 2025” is more than a symbolic gesture; it’s a direct challenge to the modern idea of dual identity in America. By forcing dual nationals to renounce their other citizenship or automatically lose their U.S. status after a one-year deadline, the bill weaponizes allegiance as a legal trigger. That explosive design becomes even more volatile when it collides with the Trump family’s complex immigration story.
Melania Trump, a naturalized citizen through an “extraordinary ability” visa, and Barron Trump, an American by birth who also holds Slovenian citizenship, would be pushed into a public, deeply personal choice: abandon their European ties or risk their place in the country that made their name synonymous with power. Beyond the Trumps, millions of Americans with dual nationality would suddenly face the same ultimatum, turning private heritage into a political battlefield.