When Conor McGregor steps into a ring, someone’s getting rocked—and this time, it wasn’t an opponent in the UFC octagon, but Ireland’s immigration policy.
On St. Patrick’s Day, McGregor met with President Donald Trump at the White House, where he delivered a no-nonsense wake-up call on Ireland’s “illegal immigration racket”. The outspoken fighter called out his home country’s weak border enforcement, saying it was at risk of “losing its Irishness.”
Of course, the globalist elites in Ireland’s government weren’t too happy about one of their most famous citizens telling the truth.
McGregor’s Warning: “Ireland Is at Risk of Losing Its Irishness”
McGregor didn’t mince words. He called out the Irish government for doing absolutely nothing about the country’s immigration crisis, blasting their leadership as “zero action with zero accountability.”
“We consider America our big sibling… The United States should look after its little bro.”
Translation? America cracked down on its own border crisis, and it’s about time Ireland did the same.
McGregor’s common-sense take sparked a meltdown among Ireland’s political elite, who—rather than addressing the issue—are now pretending he doesn’t know what he’s talking about.
Trump and McGregor: A Common-Sense Duo?
While Irish politicians were busy clutching their pearls, Trump and McGregor hit it off, discussing border security and strong national identity.
McGregor even praised Trump’s leadership, calling him “inspiring”—something that surely triggered every left-wing journalist in the room.
To top it off, he posed next to a map where the Gulf of Mexico was labeled the “Gulf of America.” That’s right—McGregor may have come to talk about Ireland, but he left dropping America First energy all over the place.
What’s Next?
McGregor isn’t one to back down, and if Irish officials think they can bully him into silence, they haven’t been paying attention to his career.
The bottom line? He said what a lot of people in Ireland are already thinking. And now that he’s got global attention, expect this debate to only get louder.
Ireland’s leadership has two choices—keep pretending nothing’s wrong or start listening before it’s too late.