WHAT ?
Analysis: The president declassified records that he claims reveal election vulnerabilities, imploring Congress to pass the SAVE America Act.
What to know about the SAVE America Act and Trump’s push for voting changes
President Donald Trump wants Congress to pass a bill requiring proof of citizenship to register to vote plus voter ID at the polls. The odds of doing so before November are slim.
July 16, 2026, 11:51 AM GMT-5 / By
Brennan Leach,
Kyle Stewart,
Rebecca Kaplan and
Frank Thorp V
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump has been singularly focused on pressuring congressional Republicans to pass the SAVE America Act, a bill he claims is needed to secure elections.
Despite pressure from the president as well as several House and Senate Republicans — and weeks spent debating the bill on the Senate floor — it lacks the necessary support to clear the 60-vote filibuster threshold in the upper chamber. Trump has called for eliminating the filibuster altogether to pass the legislation, but Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., has said his caucus is “not even close” to having the votes to do that.
The bill would overhaul federal elections by requiring voter ID at the polls and proof of citizenship to register to vote.
It is
already illegal for noncitizens to vote in federal elections, and the practice occurs rarely. Federal law requires that voters registering to vote swear under penalty of perjury that they are citizens and eligible to vote.
The House Republican Plan
House Republicans plan to pass components of the SAVE America Act through a
$95 billion party-line spending bill they started work on on Wednesday.
The process, known as reconciliation, allows Republicans to bypass the Senate filibuster and pass legislation without any Democratic support. This would be the third reconciliation bill since Trump returned to office last year.
There’s one problem: Reconciliation bills have to be related to taxes and spending. So not all provisions of the SAVE America Act can pass this way. The Senate’s nonpartisan referee, known as the parliamentarian, will decide which provisions qualify.
House Republicans on Wednesday released the budget blueprint for this process, which includes instructions for committees on how much they can spend in the final bill. The House Administration Committee would be granted $10 billion to implement elements of the SAVE America Act. That committee will decide which ones to try to pass through reconciliation.
House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., has insisted that the only way to ensure the SAVE America Act becomes law is to include it in the reconciliation process. Leaving a meeting with Vice President JD Vance and House Republicans on Wednesday night, Johnson said, “We’re going to pass the Save America Act into law, as much of that as possible.”
The
SAVE Act had two main provisions:
- Requiring documentary proof of citizenship to register to vote in federal elections.
- Requiring states to establish a program to remove noncitizens from existing voter rolls, by submitting them to the federal SAVE database, and allowing American citizens to sue election officials who don’t follow proof-of-citizenship requirements.
The
SAVE America Act includes those provisions and adds a third:
- Requiring photo identification to vote in federal elections.
Democrats and even some Republicans oppose both versions of the bill. Millions of people do not have access to passports or birth certificates and could be disenfranchised by the requirement to prove citizenship to register to vote.
Inaccurate claims by Trump
Trump has claimed that the SAVE America Act would end mail-in voting in a variety of situations and impose new limits on transgender people. The current version of the bill does neither.
President Donald Trump wants Congress to pass a bill requiring proof of citizenship to register to vote plus voter ID at the polls. The odds of doing so before November are slim.
www.nbcnews.com
End P1 of 2