State Representative Nick Kupper (R-25) is "impressed" that California gubernatorial candidate Katie Porter openly endorsed a pro-illegal immigration policy in a recent social media post, saying he had never seen Democrats do so before.
Fox News had posted that Porter, who is a strong contender for Governor of California after former Representative Eric Swalwell (D-CA) dropped out due to sexual assault allegations, "enthusiastically said she supports taxpayer-funded healthcare for illegal immigrants during a California gubernatorial primary debate."
"The former congresswoman insisting that restoring that coverage to undocumented migrants is 'what Californians deserve,'" the Fox News social media account added.
Notably, Porter only doubled down in a reply to the post, writing, "I’m Katie Porter and I approve this message."
"I gotta say I’m impressed that she actually will openly admit what Dems really want," State Rep. Kupper posted, sharing a screenshot of Porter's reply. "When we question most Dems at the Capitol they evade our questions & refuse to be honest about their most crazy liberal desires. Not @katieporterca though, she’s letting her freak flag fly high."
Kupper's remarks come on the heels of similar insinuations by Representative Abe Hamadeh (R-AZ), who posted on Wednesday that the potential for the SAVE America Act to flip New Mexico and Nevada red is a tacit admission that voter fraud is real and affects elections.
Conservative social media account Election Wizard shared an editorial from the Washington Post suggesting that the SAVE America Act could turn the swing states of Nevada and New Mexico red, even if its effects would be minimal in other states.
In response, Rep. Hamadeh wrote, "This is an outright admission from the Washington Post that voter fraud exists & tangibly changes the direction of the country."
"The American people have made it clear: they support the Save America Act," Rep. Hamadeh continued. "[President Donald Trump] supports it. [House Republicans] supports it. What are [Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD)] & [Senate Republicans] waiting for?"














