WASHINGTON, D.C. — The political world erupted this week after Rep. Chip Roy introduced the “Preserving a Sharia-Free America Act,” a sweeping new bill that seeks to bar entry — and authorize removal — of non-citizens who “adhere to, advocate for, or attempt to implement Sharia law” within the United States. What Roy describes as a necessary defense of the “American way of life” has rapidly become one of the most explosive and polarizing proposals of the year, igniting debates across Congress, cable news, civil rights circles, and constitutional law forums nationwide.
Unveiled during a tense press conference on Capitol Hill, the bill immediately drew widespread scrutiny for its unprecedented scope, its blunt language, and its potential implications for religious liberty. Standing beside a poster labeled “Sharia-Free America,” Roy argued that the U.S. is facing a cultural and national-security threat that can no longer be ignored.

“America has always welcomed people of all backgrounds,” Roy said. “But we cannot — and will not — allow the rise of legal systems or ideological frameworks that undermine our Constitution. Sharia law is incompatible with the freedoms this country stands for. This bill ensures that our laws, and only our laws, govern the land.”
The reaction was instant — and explosive.
A Bill Designed to Draw a Line
The legislation contains two main pillars:
-
A ban on the entry of foreign nationals who publicly follow or support the establishment of Sharia law.
-
Grounds for deportation for non-citizens already residing in the U.S. who “affirmatively promote” Sharia-based governance or legal structures.
The proposal frames Sharia law not as a religious practice but as a “foreign governing system” that could pose threats to “civil rights, democratic order, gender equality, and constitutional supremacy.”
Supporters — largely from the conservative wing of the House — hailed the bill as a long-overdue effort to address what they describe as an “ideological infiltration.”
“This is about sovereignty, not religion,” one GOP lawmaker said. “No foreign legal system should ever coexist with or supersede the U.S. Constitution.”
But opponents call that framing misleading, legally flawed, and deeply alarming.
Backlash Erupts Across Capitol Hill
Within minutes of Roy’s announcement, civil rights advocates and several Democratic lawmakers denounced the bill as unconstitutional and discriminatory.
Rep. Ilhan Omar called it “the most blatant attack on religious freedom in modern legislative history.”
Sen. Cory Booker said it “criminalizes thought, belief, and identity — not conduct.”
The ACLU issued a rapid response stating that the proposal “violates the First Amendment on its face.”
Critics argue that “Sharia adherence” is not a clear or legally definable category and that the bill conflates extremist ideology with ordinary religious practice.
“It’s a solution in search of a problem,” said one constitutional law professor at Georgetown. “There is no evidence — zero — that any attempt to replace American law with religious law is occurring on any meaningful scale. But this bill creates an entirely new framework for ideological vetting, which opens the door to massive abuse.”
Some lawmakers went further, warning the proposal could trigger an avalanche of litigation.
“We will see this in federal court the second it passes, if it passes at all,” said Sen. Richard Blumenthal. “This isn’t policy — it’s political theater with dangerous consequences.”
Roy Fires Back: “This Is About Protection, Not Persecution”
Rep. Roy dismissed the criticism as predictable and, in his view, intellectually dishonest.
“People claiming this bill attacks religion haven’t read it,” he insisted in a radio interview. “This bill doesn’t target faith. It targets anyone advancing an authoritarian legal system that oppresses women, violates due process, and rejects constitutional principles. That is not protected under the First Amendment.”
Roy pointed to instances in Europe where parallel legal systems have emerged within immigrant enclaves, warning that the United States “must not repeat the same mistakes.”
He also argued that the proposal would only affect non-citizens, not U.S. citizens, which he says places it squarely within Congress’s authority.
“Our immigration laws already bar communists, terrorists, and cartel affiliates,” Roy said. “This is a logical extension of the same principle: defending America from incompatible ideologies.”
Legal Experts Divided
Outside the political sphere, constitutional and immigration scholars offered a range of perspectives — from cautious interest to outright rejection.
Some experts agree that Congress does have wide authority to set immigration criteria, even ideological ones. Historical examples include Cold War restrictions on communist party members.
“Legally speaking, Congress can ban foreign nationals for almost any reason, including ideology,” said an immigration law attorney. “The deportation component, however, is much more complicated — and likely to face historic challenges.”
Others say the law’s phrasing is too vague to function.
“How do you define ‘adherence’?” one professor asked. “Who decides? What evidence is required? Not even the bill attempts to answer those questions.”
Civil Rights Groups Mobilize
Within 24 hours, multiple organizations — including the ACLU, CAIR, and the Freedom From Religion Foundation — signaled plans to oppose the bill aggressively. Statements described it as discriminatory, inflammatory, and “eerily reminiscent of past eras where fear of the ‘foreign other’ drove federal policy.”
CAIR’s spokesperson said the bill “punishes Muslims for their beliefs, even if they are peaceful, law-abiding, and committed to American values.”
Roy responded by accusing critics of “playing identity politics instead of addressing real threats.”
A National Debate With High Political Stakes
As debate intensifies, political analysts say the bill has become a proxy war for larger ideological battles — immigration, nationalism, cultural identity, and the boundaries of religious freedom.

“This bill was designed to spark a national conversation,” one strategist said. “Whether or not it passes is almost secondary. It appeals strongly to Roy’s base and forces Democrats to defend a position that some voters perceive as out of touch on cultural security issues.”
Cable news is now airing wall-to-wall coverage. Talk radio hosts are praising Roy as “the only one speaking plainly.” Legal analysts on evening panels are dissecting constitutional ramifications. Even presidential candidates have been pressed for comment.
The issue, in other words, has exploded far beyond the bill itself.
What Happens Next?
Roy’s proposal faces an uncertain future. It will likely breeze through some committees but could stall in the Senate, where opposition appears overwhelming. Even if passed, it would almost certainly face immediate legal challenges.
But politically, the bill has already succeeded in reshaping the national conversation — sparking fierce debates about who gets to come to America, what values define the nation, and how far the government can go to safeguard those values.
For now, the “Sharia-Free America Act” stands at the center of Washington’s newest firestorm — and the country is watching, arguing, and waiting to see what comes next.