President Donald Trump threatened to withhold his signature from any other legislation until Congress passes the Republican-backed SAVE America Act. This is his latest push to get stricter voter requirements in place before the November midterm elections.
Despite Trump’s strong stance, Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer is not worried. The SAVE America Act passed the Republican-led House of Representatives in February, but it faces a tough battle in the Senate. Even though Republicans control the Senate, the bill needs at least 60 votes to overcome the filibuster, which means it needs Democratic support, and that support is essentially nonexistent right now.
Posting on Truth Social from his Doral, Florida, golf club, Trump made his position clear: “I, as President, will not sign other Bills until this is passed.” According to Reuters, the SAVE America Act would require proof of citizenship when registering to vote, and it would impose criminal penalties on election officials who register anyone without that documentation.
Trump’s push for voter ID rules keeps running into the same wall, the 60-vote filibuster threshold
This is not the first time Trump has pushed for stricter voter eligibility rules. Just days before this threat, he suggested he might issue an executive order to impose voter ID requirements if Congress failed to act. A federal judge had already blocked parts of a similar executive order in 2025 that also aimed to require proof of citizenship for voter registration.
Whether Trump would fully follow through on his vow to block other legislation is also unclear. If lawmakers pass a bill and he takes no action for 10 days while Congress is in session, the bill becomes law without his signature. Trump has also been making waves on other foreign policy fronts, including how he addressed Latin American leaders on language and diplomacy.
Even within the Republican Party, there is resistance. Senate Majority Leader John Thune has said he supports the voter eligibility legislation, but he has firmly resisted calls to weaken the Senate’s filibuster rules to pass it. Thune has acknowledged there is not enough support within the Republican conference itself to change the 60-vote threshold, meaning Republicans cannot override a filibuster even without Democratic opposition.
Democratic leaders are firmly against the bill, calling it an attempt to suppress votes. Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer stated on Saturday that Democrats would not support it, calling the legislation “Jim Crow 2.0”, a reference to historical laws that restricted Black voting rights in the U.S.
Republicans have been rattled by a recent string of Democratic special election wins. Independent analysts currently favor Democrats to take control of the House, which would make Trump’s final two years in office significantly more difficult.
Meanwhile, Trump’s credibility on international matters has also taken hits, such as his claims about who carried out the school airstrike that killed 165 girls, where evidence pointed in a different direction. All of this makes the voter reform push an increasingly urgent priority for his party.
Published: Mar 9, 2026 03:15 pm