Senate Republicans signal complications for SAVE Act

Senate Majority Leader John Thune indicated that advancing the SAVE Act, which requires proof of citizenship for voter registration, faces significant procedural hurdles despite pressure from President Donald Trump. Much of the push for the bill comes from online influencers rather than within the Senate. Internal GOP disputes and other legislative priorities add to the uncertainty.

Senate Republican leaders have suggested that passing the SAVE Act, demanded by President Donald Trump, will be more complex than some conservatives anticipate. The legislation, which the House has already approved, would introduce nationwide election integrity measures, including proof-of-citizenship documentation for voter registration and voter identification for both in-person and mail ballots.

Speaking to reporters on Wednesday, Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) attributed much of the current pressure to an online "paid influencer ecosystem," rather than internal Senate dynamics. Trump has intensified calls for Senate action, stating he would refuse to sign any legislation without the SAVE Act included.

Thune acknowledged support among GOP senators but expressed uncertainty about the process: "the process and how do you ultimately try and get a result is still unclear to me." Some conservatives have proposed using a talking filibuster to force the bill forward with a simple majority, but Thune warned of challenges. "The talking filibuster issue is one on which there is not, certainly, a unified Republican conference, and there would have to be," he said after a Senate GOP meeting.

Such a strategy would involve numerous amendments and procedural votes, demanding near-perfect unity: "If you go down that path, you’re talking about the need to table what are going to be numerous amendments and an ability to keep 50 Republicans unified, pretty much on every single vote." Thune noted there is currently no support for this approach.

Republicans are balancing other priorities, such as funding the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and a housing bill. "We want to get to the SAVE Act," Thune said, but a filibuster would complicate those efforts.

The stall has sparked public GOP infighting. House Republicans like Ralph Norman (R-SC) and Tim Burchett (R-TN), along with Trump, have criticized Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) for allegedly blocking the bill, with Trump mocking him online. McConnell's office refuted this, stating he "has not, at any point in time, prevented a floor vote on any version of the SAVE Act," and the House-passed version awaits Senate consideration.

Thune's comments highlight procedural obstacles amid conservative frustration, leaving the path forward unsettled.

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GOP strategists in a meeting urging focus on economy and midterms over 2020 election grievances, with Trump portrait in background.
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Some GOP operatives want Trump to move on from 2020 election grievances as 2026 midterms near

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Some Republican strategists and local party officials say they want President Donald Trump and the GOP to focus on the economy and cost-of-living concerns ahead of the 2026 midterm elections, warning that renewed attention to 2020 election disputes could distract from issues they believe matter more to swing voters.

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.

South Carolina Republican lawmakers failed Tuesday to secure the votes needed to extend the legislative session and redraw congressional maps, stalling efforts pushed by President Donald Trump to eliminate the state's only Democratic-held House district.

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US President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Tuesday restricting mail-in ballots to voters on state-approved lists. The federal government must create a list of eligible citizens. Democrats criticize the move as potentially unconstitutional.

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