The SAVE America Act requiring proof of citizenship to vote passed the House 218-213 in February; Trump has since tied it to DHS funding, creating a standoff the Senate shows no sign of resolving.
Reuters and Votebeat reported Trump's DHS-SAVE linkage as a deliberate escalation, with Democracy Docket framing the bill as a suppression tool affecting millions of eligible citizens.
Conservative X celebrated the House vote as a safeguard; voting rights accounts called it the largest voter suppression bill since Jim Crow.
The House passed the SAVE America Act on February 11 by a vote of 218-213, requiring documentary proof of U.S. citizenship -- a REAL ID driver's license, passport, or birth certificate with photo identification -- to register to vote in federal elections [1]. No Democrats voted for it. The bill has sat in the Senate since.
On March 22, Trump ordered Republicans to refuse any deal to fund the Department of Homeland Security unless Democrats agreed to pass the SAVE Act [2]. The linkage is deliberate: DHS has been partially shut down for seven weeks, and Trump framed citizenship verification as a homeland security matter. "Proof of citizenship is part of homeland security," he said [3].
The National Women's Law Center estimated the bill would disenfranchise millions of eligible voters who lack the required documentation, disproportionately affecting women, the elderly, and low-income citizens [4]. The Campaign Legal Center noted the bill is an escalation of a predecessor that failed in the previous Congress [5]. Votebeat reported the practical impact would fall hardest in states with same-day registration, where proof-of-citizenship requirements would create immediate barriers at polling places for the 2026 midterms [6].
The Senate has shown no appetite for the bill. The DHS shutdown continues. The SAVE Act exists in the space where legislation becomes leverage.
-- MAYA CALLOWAY, New York