Speaker Johnson: America is the Most Free, Most Successful, Most Powerful, Most Benevolent Nation the World Has Ever KnownAnd it’s not even close.”
Washington,
June 28, 2026
WASHINGTON — This morning, Speaker Johnson joined Fox News’ Sunday Morning Futures with Maria Bartiromo to discuss the significance of the Declaration of Independence and our spiritual foundations as Americans around the country gather to celebrate our 250th anniversary this week. Speaker Johnson also discussed House Republicans’ efforts to make everyday life more affordable for working families and to ensure election integrity. “The experiment in self-governance has been a tremendous success. And the reason is because we’re built upon these very firm foundations; this didn’t happen by happenstance,” Speaker Johnson said. “It’s because the Founders studied and prayed and put together a matchless Constitution, a system of government that followed, frankly, the admonitions of Scripture.” Watch Speaker Johnson’s full interview here. On the significance of the Declaration of Independence: The great statesman, GK Chesterton, once observed from Great Britain that America is the only nation in the world that was founded upon a creed. And he said that it's listed with almost theological lucidity or clarity in the Declaration of Independence, which we celebrate this week. What is the creed? We hold these truths to be self-evident, the founders said, and what is a self-evident truth? It's something that's obvious. We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal. It doesn't say born equal. It says created equal, in that it is God, not the government, who gives us our inalienable rights. That foundational truth is what built America. It was the foundation of all of it and is what we still celebrate and are fighting every day right now to preserve. On bipartisan legislation to lower the cost of homeownership for working families: The housing bill really is a Republican priority because it will lower housing costs. We made a lot of promises to the voters, and we're fulfilling those every single day this Congress. And this is a big part of that because it will increase the availability, the access to more housing, bring down costs, cut regulations, do the things that we know are very important for that market. The President and I talked about that at length. Of course, he wants to do all those things. I'm going to send the bill over to him. It’s passed by both chambers, I'm sending it to him on Monday, and it will become law. And I certainly want him to take the biggest, boldest marker that he has and do that big Trump signature proudly on that legislation because we're delivering for the people. And that's what he wants to do. On Republican efforts to secure American elections: We passed it three times in the House already. We're going to pass it again. And this time we're going to try to put it on a reconciliation bill. And the reason that's so important, Maria, as you know, is it prevents the necessity of 60 votes in the Senate. The Democrats want no part of this. And remember, this is very basic stuff. We're just going to make sure you have to have proof of citizenship to register to vote and then show an ID when you turn out at the ballot box. These are 90/10 public opinion issues. And more than 70% of Democrats want to do it, but not the Democrats in the House and Senate. And so, we've got to go around them. And look, I told Anna Paulina Luna and a couple other colleagues, I said, it makes no sense for us to shut down our good work in the House just because Senate Democrats refuse to do the the people's will. We've got a lot more to do. We’ve got to keep it going. On the House Republican agenda going forward: The message [from President Trump] was, listen, don't turn the the Floor over to the radical left. That's what happens when the party in charge, the Republican Party, votes against its own rules to proceed with legislation. So, look, we'll get everybody together on Monday, tomorrow, we're bringing them all back. We've got a big week ahead of us of before we begin all the celebrations on the weekend. Much more left to do. We've got the National Defense Authorization Act; we have appropriations where we're spending less money and doing it more efficiently and effectively. We have the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act we've got to get reauthorized; we've got the Surface Transportation bill, many really important pieces of legislation, and of course, Reconciliation 3.0. I have to have everybody working here on all cylinders, and I'm excited to bring them back. ### |