By Yasin Gungor
ISTANBUL (AA) - As the US barrels toward the pivotal November 2026 midterm elections, which could heavily impact the last half of Donald Trump’s second term as president, a fierce legislative battle over who can register to vote and how they prove their eligibility has taken center stage in nationwide debates.
At the center of the storm is the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) America Act. Introduced in the House of Representatives on Jan. 30 by Congressman Chip Roy and passed on Feb. 11 by a vote of 218-213, the bill escalates the Republican emphasis on purported election security concerns by adding strict photo identification mandates to previous proof-of-citizenship proposals.
A previous version of the legislation also passed the House last April before stalling in the Senate, but the new bill represents the most significant proposed overhaul of US federal voter registration and voting laws since 1993. It seeks to shift the nation from an honor system, where voters attest to their citizenship under penalty of perjury, to a strict document-based system requiring physical proof of status to both register and cast a ballot.
For US President Donald Trump and his Republican allies, the act is needed to prevent non-citizens from swaying federal elections. For Democrats and civil rights groups, it is a calculated suppression tactic designed to erect bureaucratic barriers that could strip millions of eligible Americans of their right to vote, using the negligible threat of in-person voting fraud as a pretext.
- What is the SAVE America Act?
The SAVE America Act was introduced to amend the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA) of 1993, commonly known as the "Motor Voter" law. Under current statutes, when Americans register to vote, often at Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) offices, they must sign a sworn statement affirming their US citizenship. Falsely claiming citizenship is a felony punishable by deportation and imprisonment.
Republicans argue that this attestation is insufficient. The SAVE America Act would prohibit states from accepting any voter registration application for federal elections unless the applicant presents documentary proof of US citizenship in person.
Crucially, the new legislation expands these requirements beyond registration to the act of voting itself.
- Federal photo ID mandate
A defining feature of the new bill is the establishment of a federal requirement for photo identification to vote.
"Each individual voting in an election for Federal office shall present an eligible photo identification document," the bill states.
The legislation imposes specific standards for this ID:
- In-Person Voting: Voters must present a "tangible (not digital) document" at the time of voting.
- Absentee Voting: Voters must submit a copy of the eligible ID twice: once with the request for an absentee ballot and again with the ballot's submission.
- Citizenship Markers: To be valid, the ID must contain a photo and "an indication on the front of the document that the individual identified on the document is a United States citizen."
Eligible IDs must be issued by specific authorities, including the State Department, the US Armed Forces, or a state DMV, provided they meet the citizenship marker requirement.
Unlike many countries, the US lacks any national ID card, though driver’s licenses or passports often serve this role in practice. Historically, the public has opposed the introduction of such cards, with fears of an overly intrusive federal government looming large in this sentiment.
- 'Real ID' and citizenship loophole
A central pillar of the Republican argument is the distinction between driver's licenses – issued by individual states, but with national standardization – and proof of citizenship.
Many Americans assume that possessing a "Real ID" – federally standardized driver's licenses, under the 2005 Real ID Act – is proof of their status. However, legislative backers of the act point out a critical nuance: non-citizens who are legal permanent residents, such as green card holders, are eligible to obtain Real ID-compliant licenses.
Under the SAVE America Act, a standard Real ID lacking a specific citizenship indicator on the front would no longer be sufficient for voting.
The bill limits acceptable documents to ones issued consistent with the requirements of the Real ID Act, including a valid US passport, a certified birth certificate, a certificate of naturalization, a military ID card showing place of birth, or an enhanced driver's license that specifically indicates citizenship status.
- Origins and the Trump factor
The legislative push stems directly from the rhetoric of Trump, who has trumpeted "election integrity" concerns as a cornerstone of his administration. Following his previous claims regarding the 2020 election, which have been largely debunked, Trump has intensified his focus on the potential for non-citizen voting, despite studies showing that such fraud occurs at negligible rates, typically less than 0.0001% of votes cast.
Trump has framed the issue as an existential threat to the nation, warning apocalyptically: "We are either going to fix them, or we won't have a country any longer."
- Executive limits and judicial blocks
Frustrated by congressional inaction, Trump attempted to bypass the legislative deadlock through executive power. In March 2025, he signed an executive order directing federal agencies to assist states in verifying voter eligibility and to modify absentee ballot forms for overseas voters to require proof of citizenship.
However, the limits of presidential power have stymied these efforts. Federal judges have blocked key portions of the order, citing the US Constitution’s Elections Clause, which grants Congress – not the president – the primary authority to regulate the “Times, Places and Manner” of federal elections.
- Integrity vs. suppression
As the midterms approach, the debate has solidified into two determined camps.
Supporters argue that the legislation is necessary to restore public trust. House Republicans contend that even if non-citizen voting is rare, the potential for it undermines the perceived legitimacy of outcomes, with Republicans themselves leading the drive towards skepticism.
Critics, including the Democratic leadership and civil rights groups, view the bill as a revival of voter suppression tactics such as poll taxes and “literacy tests,” which have historically been used to suppress votes by minority groups.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer dismissed the legislative effort, saying it “is not about securing our elections. It is about suppressing voters" and vowed it will be “dead on arrival in the Senate.”
The practical impact on eligible voters is the opposition's primary weapon. According to the Washington-based Brennan Center for Justice, approximately 21.3 million US citizens, or roughly 9% of the voting-age population, do not have ready access to the citizenship documents required by the act, a lack that disproportionately affects minorities.
- Impact on women and minorities
Opponents point to specific demographics that would be disproportionately harmed.
Millions of American women – who statistically tend to vote for Democrats – could face immediate hurdles due to name changes. Because most married women change their surnames, their birth certificates often do not match their current driver's licenses or voter registrations. Under the new act, these women would likely need to produce a marriage license or other legal documentation to bridge the gap, a bureaucratic step that critics argue will discourage participation.
Furthermore, statistics show that low-income voters, racial minorities, and young people are less likely to possess passports or have easy access to their birth certificates.
“This is nothing more than voter suppression disguised as voter protection,” said the civil rights organization NAACP in a formal condemnation of the proposal.
-Public opinion, legislative outlook
Polling data reveals a public that is theoretically supportive of the bill's concept but deeply divided on its implementation.
Surveys by Gallup and Pew Research in recent years show that between 80% and 85% of Americans support the general idea of requiring photo ID or proof of citizenship to vote. This support crosses party lines, with even a majority of Democrats favoring identification measures in the abstract.
As the House passed the SAVE America Act, it now heads to the Senate, where its predecessor faced steep obstacles. Although Republicans hold 53 of the chamber’s 100 seats, most legislation requires 60 votes to advance, making it necessary for them to break a Democratic filibuster.
Despite the legislative gridlock, the act remains a potent political tool. Republicans intend to use the Democrats' blockage of the bill as a key campaign message in the upcoming midterm elections, accusing their opponents of wanting to allow "illegal” votes. Such messaging has also been tied to “replacement theory” rhetoric, a right-wing conspiracy theory that Democrats are trying to “replace” the country’s white, European-rooted population with a non-white immigrant population.
Conversely, Democrats plan to campaign on the protection of voting rights, framing the Republican effort as a direct attack on democracy, part of unfounded election denialism and efforts to make it harder for ordinary citizens to cast ballots.