President Trump pushes SAVE Act and executive order on voting

President Donald Trump is advocating for the SAVE Act, which requires proof of citizenship to register to vote, and threatening an executive order to impose stricter voting rules. These measures, tied to claims of foreign election interference, could complicate registration and voting for the 2026 midterms. Election law expert Rick Hasen warns they would disenfranchise millions without addressing actual fraud.

In a recent NPR interview, UCLA law professor Rick Hasen discussed President Trump's efforts to tighten voting access. Trump is promoting the SAVE Act, passed by the House and pending in the Senate, which mandates documentary proof of citizenship—such as a passport, birth certificate, or naturalization certificate—for voter registration. This goes beyond typical voter ID, requiring re-registration for many Americans and potentially blocking millions, as seen in Kansas where a similar 2010s law halted 30,000 registrations, with over 99% eligible.

Trump has threatened an executive order if Congress does not act, drawing from a draft by election deniers. The proposed order, linked to conspiracy theories of foreign interference in the 2020 and 2024 elections by entities like China and Iran, would limit registration to in-person or mail methods, ban online options, impose national ID standards at polls, require database matching for citizenship, alter mail ballot timelines, eliminate most absentee voting, and shift lawsuits to federal courts. Hasen noted these changes target the 2026 elections but face constitutional hurdles under Article 1, Section 4, which assigns election regulation to states and Congress, not the president.

Courts have blocked prior Trump orders, including one from August requiring citizenship proof on federal forms, with injunctions and permanent halts issued. Hasen emphasized fraud's rarity: only about 30 possible noncitizen voting cases in 2016 nationwide, compared to disenfranchisement risks. In his State of the Union, Trump called for the SAVE America Act to enforce voter ID, citizenship proof, and restrict mail-in ballots except for specific cases, claiming 89% public support—though polls favor general ID, not stringent documentation.

Hasen, founder of the Election Law Blog and director of UCLA's Safeguarding Democracy Project, described these moves as authoritarian threats to democracy, echoing post-2020 denialism. A related Supreme Court case, Louisiana v. Callais, challenges Section 2 of the 1965 Voting Rights Act, potentially weakening minority representation in districts. Hasen advocates a constitutional amendment guaranteeing voting rights, absent in the current U.S. framework.

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Florida legislators applaud passage of bill mandating proof of U.S. citizenship for voter registration.
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Florida Legislature approves bill requiring documentary proof of U.S. citizenship for voter registration

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Florida’s Republican-led Legislature passed an elections bill on Thursday that would require documentary proof of U.S. citizenship for people registering to vote and would bar student IDs from being used as identification at the polls. The measure now heads to Gov. Ron DeSantis.

Republicans in the US Senate plan to vote this week on the SAVE America Act, a bill pushed by President Trump requiring proof of citizenship for voter registration. The measure aims to prevent noncitizen voting, described as rare by experts, but could disenfranchise millions lacking documents. Its passage faces hurdles due to the filibuster.

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The SAVE America Act, which mandates proof of citizenship for voter registration and ID at polls, passed the House but faces resistance in the Republican-led Senate. President Trump urged its passage in his State of the Union address, yet Majority Leader John Thune has expressed caution over procedural strategies amid ongoing Department of Homeland Security funding issues. Democrats strongly oppose the bill, warning it could disenfranchise millions of voters.

Sen. Bill Hagerty said on Fox News that Democrats’ resistance to the Republican-backed SAVE America Act is tied to illegal immigration, arguing that voter ID and citizenship checks are broadly popular. Sen. Susan Collins said she supports the House-passed bill but only if Republicans do not try to weaken or eliminate the Senate filibuster—leaving the measure with a steep 60-vote hurdle.

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White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said President Donald Trump is urging lawmakers from both parties to act quickly on the SAVE America Act. In a press briefing on Wednesday, Leavitt responded to questions about Republican leadership's efforts by emphasizing the need for 'Trump speed.' The bill, which passed the House last month, faces hurdles in the Senate.

The US Supreme Court heard oral arguments on April 1, 2026, in Trump v. Barbara, challenging President Donald Trump’s executive order limiting birthright citizenship. Trump attended the hearing in person—the first sitting president to do so—before leaving midway and posting criticism on Truth Social. A majority of justices expressed skepticism toward the administration’s arguments.

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The U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments on March 30, 2026, in Trump v. Barbara, challenging President Trump's executive order limiting birthright citizenship for children of undocumented immigrants or those on temporary visas. As previously covered, the order—issued January 20, 2025—interprets the 14th Amendment as not granting automatic citizenship in these cases. A ruling, expected in coming months, could impact hundreds of thousands of children born after February 20, 2025.

 

 

 

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