Senate prepares vote on Trump's SAVE America Act

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.

The Senate is set to consider the SAVE America Act this week, a voting overhaul that has become a priority for President Trump. The bill would mandate photo ID to vote and documentary proof of US citizenship, such as a birth certificate or passport, for voter registration. Trump highlighted it in his State of the Union address, stating, “All voters must show voter ID.” Proponents pitch it as a safeguard against noncitizen voting, though experts like Georgetown Law professor Stephen Vladeck note such incidents occur “so infrequently.” Vladeck warned that “countless Americans” lack the required documents, including those whose names have changed after marriage, potentially disenfranchising eligible citizens without addressing a significant problem: “the solution would be much, much worse than the disease.” NPR correspondent Miles Parks added that research shows tens of millions of Americans do not have easy access to these documents, which can be costly, and the law would take effect immediately, risking an “administrative nightmare.” Trump has also advocated federal control over elections, but Vladeck explained that the Constitution (Article 1, Section 4) assigns administration to states, with Congress able to set rules like Election Day but no presidential authority to intervene unilaterally, even via emergency declarations. Local and state officials run polls, limiting executive influence. Passage requires 60 Senate votes to overcome the filibuster; Republicans hold 53, and Democrats oppose it. Senate Majority Leader John Thune stated, “It’s about the votes. It’s about the math,” indicating no plans to alter rules. Trump seeks expansions like mail-in voting restrictions, but Vladeck emphasized states need not comply without congressional action.

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Illustration of election officials verifying citizenship documents during voter registration in a state office.
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Several GOP-led states move to tighten voter registration with citizenship-document checks

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As of late April 2026, five Republican-led states—Florida, Mississippi, South Dakota, Utah and Kentucky—had enacted new laws tying voter registration or ballot access to documentary proof of U.S. citizenship, according to Voting Rights Lab, a nonprofit that tracks election legislation. The measures come amid broader Republican-backed efforts at the state and federal levels to add citizenship-verification steps to election administration.

A federal judge in Boston on Wednesday issued a permanent injunction blocking key parts of President Donald Trump’s executive order that sought, among other changes, to require documentary proof of U.S. citizenship for voter registration using the federal form. The Justice Department is expected to appeal.

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President Donald Trump canceled a planned signing ceremony for the 21st Century Road to Housing Act on Wednesday. He linked the move to passage of the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act. The housing measure had cleared Congress with strong bipartisan support.

Florida Republican Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar is promoting her Dignidad Act amid growing backlash from within her party. The bill, introduced in July 2025, would grant legal status to certain long-term undocumented immigrants and protect Dreamers, sparking debate on social media and in recent interviews. Critics call it amnesty, while Salazar insists it removes criminals and secures the border.

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An Earth911 article calls on Americans to register to vote now to influence environmental policy in upcoming elections.

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