Composite illustration of Sens. Hagerty and Collins on the SAVE Act, highlighting immigration ties and filibuster concerns.
Composite illustration of Sens. Hagerty and Collins on the SAVE Act, highlighting immigration ties and filibuster concerns.
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Hagerty ties Democratic opposition to the SAVE Act to immigration, as Collins backs bill but warns against scrapping the filibuster

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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.

On Sunday, Tennessee Republican Sen. Bill Hagerty appeared on Fox News’ Sunday Morning Futures with Maria Bartiromo to promote Republicans’ push for the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility—often referred to as the SAVE America Act.

During the interview, Hagerty argued that voter ID is widely supported, saying it is backed by “north of 80%” of the public and that “over 70% of Democrats” favor it, while contending that Senate Democrats would not support the bill.

Hagerty also pointed to Democrats’ earlier election-law push—often referred to as H.R. 1—as evidence of what he described as an effort to weaken voter ID rules nationwide. In the interview excerpt highlighted by The Daily Wire, he claimed Democrats sought changes that would “do away with voter ID across the nation,” allow 16-year-olds and felons to vote, and use taxpayer funding to support campaigns.

Hagerty then connected Democratic opposition to immigration, asserting that Democrats “flooded this country with tens of millions of illegal aliens” and suggesting that they want “chaos” in elections and “no voter ID.”

The House recently passed a version of the SAVE America Act on a near party-line vote, 218–213. The bill would require documentary proof of U.S. citizenship when registering to vote—typically through documents such as a passport or birth certificate—and would also require photo identification before voting, according to reporting by The Associated Press.

In the Senate, Maine Republican Sen. Susan Collins said she supports the House-passed version of the bill but conditioned her support on Republicans not trying to eliminate the filibuster. In a statement cited by The Daily Wire, Collins called voter ID a “simple reform” and said, “The law is clear that in this country only American citizens are eligible to vote in federal elections,” adding that identification requirements would improve election security and public confidence.

Even with a Republican majority, the bill’s prospects remain uncertain because most legislation in the Senate must clear a 60-vote threshold to advance, and Democrats have signaled they would use the filibuster to block the measure. A post dated February 15, 2026, from the Sunday Morning Futures account referenced Democrats vowing to filibuster the GOP-backed voter ID bill.

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Discussions on X highlight Sen. Hagerty's defense of the SAVE Act, tying Democratic opposition to non-citizen voting concerns and noting voter ID popularity. Sen. Collins' support is praised by figures like Kari Lake but criticized as performative due to her filibuster stance. Conservatives advocate nuking the filibuster for passage, while detractors view the bill as suppressive.

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Dramatic split-scene illustration of Democratic attorneys general strategizing against Trump's proof-of-citizenship voting bill, backed by a supportive Heritage poll.
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Democratic attorneys general organize legal preparations as Trump backs proof-of-citizenship voting bill and Heritage Action poll shows broad support

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Democratic state attorneys general have stepped up legal and political efforts ahead of the 2026 midterm elections as President Donald Trump promotes federal changes to election rules, including a House-passed bill tied to proof of citizenship. A Heritage Action-commissioned poll reported majority support for those requirements in five states.

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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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.

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.

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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.

The U.S. House of Representatives approved a package of spending bills on Thursday to avert a partial government shutdown, though many Democrats opposed the funding for Immigration and Customs Enforcement amid concerns over its tactics. The measure now heads to the Senate for a vote ahead of a January 30 deadline. Objections stemmed from a recent fatal shooting by an ICE officer in Minneapolis and broader criticisms of the agency's enforcement practices.

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President Donald Trump called for Republicans to take control of elections in at least 15 states during a Monday interview, citing concerns over illegal voting and election integrity. The remarks came amid an FBI raid on a Georgia election office probing 2020 interference allegations. Trump tied the push to his unsubstantiated claims of winning the 2020 election decisively.

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