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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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.

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.

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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.

A Texas man who became a U.S. citizen as a teenager had his voter registration canceled after a federal database search flagged him as a potential noncitizen. The case has intensified concerns about the accuracy and rollout of an overhauled SAVE system that the Trump administration has promoted as a way for states to check voter eligibility, with election officials and advocates warning that it could mistakenly remove eligible voters from the rolls.

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President Donald Trump is pressing House lawmakers to approve a Senate-amended spending package without changes to end a partial federal government shutdown that began early Saturday. The debate has also drawn in GOP demands tied to the SAVE Act, which would require documentary proof of U.S. citizenship to register to vote—an idea Democrats say would block any final deal.

Sen. Bill Hagerty has reintroduced legislation to expand the federal ban on foreign-national political spending to cover ballot measures, voter registration, ballot collection and other get-out-the-vote activities. Election-integrity advocacy groups Americans for Public Trust and the Honest Elections Project back the effort.

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Roughly two dozen states, including Minnesota, have rebuffed the Trump administration's demand for access to their voter rolls, sparking legal battles with the Justice Department. Democratic officials view the push as an overreach tied to unsubstantiated election fraud claims. The administration insists the requests ensure compliance with federal election laws.

 

 

 

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