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Trump Links SAVE America Act Push to DHS Funding Lapse and Vows Not to Sign Other Bills Until Voting Measure with Strict ID and Proof‑of‑Citizenship Rules Passes

President Trump posted on Truth Social that he “will not sign other Bills” until the Senate passes a beefed‑up SAVE America Act, demanding strict voter‑ID and proof‑of‑citizenship rules, severe limits on mail‑in ballots and bans on transgender medical care for minors and “men in women’s sports,” even as the White House separately urged Congress to restore DHS funding amid a lapse that has left more than 100,000 DHS employees unpaid. The ultimatum has split Republicans—Senate leaders like John Thune resist changing filibuster rules and some officials say DHS funding could be treated as an exception—while Democrats, led by Chuck Schumer, say they will not help pass the bill and warn it would disenfranchise voters; narrow GOP margins in Congress and the possible confirmation of Sen. Markwayne Mullin as DHS secretary further complicate the bill’s prospects, and legal experts note a presidential refusal to sign does not automatically block legislation if Congress remains in session.

Election Law and Voter ID Donald Trump Voting Rules and Voter ID U.S. Congress and Legislation Federal Voting Policy

📌 Key Facts

  • President Trump posted on Truth Social that he "will not sign other Bills" until the Senate passes a beefed‑up SAVE America Act ("NOT THE WATERED DOWN VERSION — GO FOR THE GOLD"), repeatedly pressing the demand to Congress and urging tactics like a "talking filibuster"; a White House official later suggested DHS funding might be exempt, creating conflicting signals about carve‑outs.
  • The SAVE America Act as Trump describes it would add strict ID and citizenship requirements: require documentary proof of U.S. citizenship to register (examples cited include passport or birth certificate plus photo ID), mandate ID checks for all voting (including photocopies for absentee ballots), restrict universal mail‑in voting (limited exceptions for military, illness, disability and travel), require frequent voter‑roll reviews and federal sharing of state registration data, and include provisions banning "men in women's sports" and prohibiting gender‑affirming surgeries for minors.
  • Senate leaders and Republicans are divided over how to proceed: Majority Leader John Thune has promised a vote but is skeptical of changing filibuster rules or relying on a talking filibuster; former GOP leader Mitch McConnell and other senators oppose that tactic while Sen. Mike Lee and outside activists push it; narrow GOP margins in both chambers and Senator Markwayne Mullin’s pending DHS confirmation complicate the vote arithmetic.
  • Democrats uniformly oppose the measure in public: Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer says Democrats "will not help pass the SAVE Act under any circumstances," calls it "Jim Crow 2.0," and warns the ultimatum would produce "total gridlock" in the Senate; House Democrats and some independents say the threat effectively blocks the Republican legislative agenda.
  • Trump has framed the SAVE Act as central to Republican electoral strategy, telling House Republicans the bill would "guarantee the midterms" and listing it among five top priorities (voter ID, citizenship verification, limiting mail‑in ballots, banning transgender surgeries for minors, and barring men from women's sports), even as House leaders publicly emphasize economic messaging.
  • A funding lapse at the Department of Homeland Security has left more than 100,000 DHS employees (including TSA, FEMA and Coast Guard personnel) without pay, increasing pressure on Republicans to reopen the department; GOP leaders (including Whip John Barrasso) say reopening DHS is a top priority and some Republicans privately hope for an exception to the SAVE ultimatum to end the shutdown.
  • Federal and state data and experts indicate documented noncitizen voting is extremely rare: DHS checks before the 2024 election flagged roughly 10,000 potential noncitizens out of 49.5 million registrations checked (about 0.02%), and a 2024 Georgia audit found 20 noncitizens among 8.2 million registrants; election‑law scholars say the incidence is vanishingly small even as Republicans cite it to justify the bill. PBS/NPR/Marist polling shows declining confidence in election administration (66% confident in Nov. 2026 vs. 76% in Oct. 2024) and that concerns about fraud remain higher among Republicans.
  • The practical effect of Trump's refusal to sign legislation is legally uncertain: under the Constitution, a bill becomes law if the president does not sign it within 10 days while Congress remains in session, but a pocket veto can kill a bill if Congress adjourns during that period—so the real leverage of the ultimatum depends on timing and congressional maneuvers.

📊 Relevant Data

Nationwide, 13% of Black voting-age U.S. citizens, 12% of Hispanic voting-age U.S. citizens, and 7% of White voting-age U.S. citizens lack ready access to documentary proof of citizenship, such as a birth certificate or passport.

Millions of US voters lack access to documents to prove citizenship — The Guardian

In a 2023 survey, 5% of voting-age U.S. citizens reported lacking a current driver's license or non-driver ID, with higher rates among Black (8%) and Hispanic (7%) citizens compared to White citizens (4%).

Who Lacks ID in America Today? An Exploration of Voter ID Access and Barriers — Center for Democracy and Civic Engagement, University of Maryland

As of 2024, fewer than 10 transgender athletes are known to be competing in NCAA college sports out of over 500,000 total athletes.

NCAA president says there are 'less than 10' transgender athletes in college sports — KGET

The rate of gender-affirming surgeries among transgender and gender-diverse adolescents aged 15 to 17 in the U.S. was 2.1 per 100,000 in 2019.

National Estimates of Gender-Affirming Surgery in the US — JAMA Network Open

A 2017 study found that strict voter ID laws reduced turnout by 2-3 percentage points among Latino, Black, and Asian American voters in the U.S., with effects persisting in subsequent elections.

Study Shows How Strict Voter ID Laws Suppress Voting by People of Color — Institute of the Black World 21st Century

Since the 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act, the U.S. immigrant population grew from 9.6 million (5% of total population) in 1970 to 46.1 million (14% of total) in 2023, with post-1965 immigrants and their descendants accounting for 72 million of the 135 million population increase by 2015.

Frequently Requested Statistics on Immigrants and Immigration in the United States — Migration Policy Institute

📊 Analysis & Commentary (2)

Three Lines of Evidence for Innate Sex Differences
Stevestewartwilliams by Steve Stewart-Williams March 11, 2026

"A pro‑biological‑essentialist opinion arguing that three converging lines of scientific evidence support innate sex differences and that those findings should inform policy debates reflected in the SAVE America Act (notably rules on biological males in women’s sports and limits on gender‑affirming care)."

DAVID MARCUS: Sen Thune has no idea how mad the GOP base is at him
Fox News March 11, 2026

"The opinion piece criticizes Senate Majority Leader John Thune as out of touch with GOP voters' fury over Senate inaction, urging aggressive party enforcement to force passage of the SAVE America Act (especially voter‑ID provisions) and arguing Texas’s Cornyn–Paxton result reflects a nationwide demand for action."

📰 Source Timeline (14)

Follow how coverage of this story developed over time

March 12, 2026
1:14 PM
Trump pressures lawmakers to pass bill that would impact American voting requirements
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • CBS segment foregrounds Senate Majority Leader John Thune’s public assessment that he is being 'realistic' about the SAVE America Act’s chances in the Senate.
  • It emphasizes that Trump is 'doubling down' on his push and pressure campaign for the SAVE America Act despite that skepticism in the upper chamber.
  • The piece frames the moment as a clash between Trump’s escalating demands and Senate leadership’s view of the bill’s likely fate, but offers no detailed new legislative mechanics beyond what is already reported.
March 11, 2026
10:30 PM
How Trump's SAVE Act would reshape voting and why critics are concerned
PBS News by Doug Adams
New information:
  • Clarifies that the SAVE America Act would require all Americans to provide documentary proof of U.S. citizenship when registering to vote and mandate an ID check for all voting, including by mail, with absentee voters required to submit a photocopy of their ID.
  • Specifies that the bill would require states to conduct frequent voter‑roll reviews to identify and remove noncitizens and would mandate that states share voter‑registration data with the federal government, something most states have so far resisted and some federal judges have backed them on.
  • Provides Trump’s fresh public framing that the SAVE America Act 'supersedes everything else' and that he 'will not sign other bills until this is passed,' quoting his early‑Sunday social‑media post after returning from a dignified transfer for six U.S. soldiers.
  • Introduces Department of Homeland Security data from the Trump administration showing that of 49.5 million voter registrations checked ahead of the 2024 election, about 10,000 (roughly 0.02%) were flagged for possible noncitizenship and referred for further investigation.
  • Adds Georgia‑specific data: a 2024 audit of 8.2 million registered voters in the state found only 20 noncitizens who had registered.
  • Includes expert commentary from election‑law scholars David Becker and Rick Hasen emphasizing that documented noncitizen voting is exceedingly rare and carries serious legal risk, undercutting claims of widespread fraud.
  • Reports fresh PBS News/NPR/Marist polling: 66% of Americans are confident their state or local governments will run fair elections in November (down from 76% in October 2024), and 33% of adults say voter fraud is the biggest threat to safe and secure elections, with Republicans far more concerned about fraud than Democrats.
7:36 PM
Trump has one prescription for the midterms. House Republicans have another
PBS News by Steven Sloan, Associated Press
New information:
  • Beyond tying DHS funding to the SAVE America Act, Trump is now telling House Republicans he will not sign any other legislation until the voting bill passes.
  • He presented this ultimatum at a House GOP ideas conference at his Doral golf resort, telling lawmakers that the SAVE America Act would ‘guarantee the midterms’ and warning of ‘big trouble’ if they fail to deliver.
  • The reporting highlights that House Republican leaders, while not opposing the bill, are choosing to publicly emphasize economic talking points like tax cuts, energy prices and ‘Trump accounts’ rather than making the voting bill their top message.
  • Speaker Mike Johnson publicly denied any rift and claimed he and Trump are ‘exactly in lockstep,’ even as Trump downplayed issues like housing and costs in favor of the voting package.
March 10, 2026
9:50 PM
Trump urges Congress to pass SAVE America Act, fully fund DHS as TSA workers go without pay
Fox News
New information:
  • White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt says more than 100,000 federal employees at DHS are going without pay during a prolonged funding lapse, including TSA, FEMA and Coast Guard personnel.
  • Leavitt states that President Trump is urging Congress both to pass the SAVE America Act and to approve a separate vote to restore DHS funding and fully reopen the department.
  • The article lays out five core provisions of the SAVE America Act as described by Leavitt: voter ID at the polls, proof of citizenship to register, ending universal mail-in ballots while keeping limited exceptions, a permanent ban on 'biological males' in women’s sports, and a ban on transgender surgery for minors.
  • Leavitt claims 'ninety percent of Americans, including more than 80% of Democrat voters' support voter ID, framing the SAA as 'overwhelmingly popular' and 'rooted in common sense.'
  • She directly rebuts viral claims that the bill would prevent married women who changed their last names from voting, saying 'there is zero validity to these claims' and that already registered voters would be 'entirely unaffected' aside from 'illegal aliens.'
9:00 AM
Trump’s newest pledge has Democrats cheering — and Republicans squirming
MS NOW by Jack Fitzpatrick
New information:
  • Trump has publicly pledged on Truth Social that he will not sign any bills into law until a beefed‑up version of the SAVE America Act is passed, specifying ‘NOT THE WATERED DOWN VERSION – GO FOR THE GOLD.’
  • In the same post, Trump links his ultimatum to multiple policy demands: mandatory voter ID and proof of citizenship, ending most mail‑in ballots (except for military, illness, disability and travel), banning ‘men in women’s sports,’ and prohibiting what he calls ‘transgender mutilization for children.’
  • On March 10, 2026, Trump told reporters in Florida: ‘I’m not gonna sign anything until this is approved. I really am,’ indicating no backdown despite anonymous White House suggestions he might sign DHS funding.
  • Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer publicly welcomed the threat, saying on X that if Trump refuses to sign bills until the SAVE Act passes, ‘there will be total gridlock in the Senate’ and reiterating Democrats ‘will not help pass the SAVE Act under any circumstances,’ calling it ‘Jim Crow 2.0.’
  • Senate Majority Leader John Thune has acknowledged there is not enough GOP support to change Senate rules for a ‘talking filibuster’ on the SAVE America Act and that Murkowski opposes the bill, while Republicans privately hope Trump will carve out an exception for DHS funding to end the three‑week department shutdown.
  • Sen. Angus King and other Democrats are openly saying they are content with Trump’s stance because it effectively blocks his own legislative agenda, undercutting GOP efforts to blame Democrats for the DHS shutdown.
1:30 AM
Trump reveals top issues GOP should focus on to secure midterms victory: 'I've never been more confident'
Fox News
New information:
  • Trump, at the Republican Members' Issues Conference, explicitly laid out five priorities he says should be the House GOP’s 'number one' focus to 'guarantee the midterms': banning what he called 'transgender mutilation surgery for our children,' enacting voter ID, securing 'citizenship [verification],' tightening mail-in ballot rules, and barring 'men playing in women's sports.'
  • He framed these as a 'popular agenda' that, if enacted, would let Republicans buck historical midterm losses, saying, 'I've never been more confident that if we keep these promises and deliver on this popular agenda, the American people will stand with us in overwhelming numbers.'
  • The article details that the SAVE America Act—requiring proof of citizenship to register and vote—has already passed the House for the second time this Congress, but faces a 60-vote hurdle in the Senate where Republicans would need seven Democrats to overcome a filibuster.
  • Democrats are quoted/characterized as arguing the SAVE America Act would disenfranchise voters who lack ready access to passports, REAL ID, or birth certificates, adding a clear line of opposition to the policy push.
  • The piece reiterates narrow GOP margins—four House seats and six Senate seats—and notes that Senate Majority Leader John Thune has promised a vote on the SAVE America Act despite its long odds.
March 09, 2026
11:49 PM
Trump lays down law on Iran and SAVE Act in GOP pep talk
Axios by Kate Santaliz
New information:
  • At the House GOP retreat in Doral, Florida, Trump again told House Republicans he 'is not going to sign anything' until the Senate passes the SAVE America Act, explicitly urging use of a 'talking filibuster' and suggesting attaching the bill to FISA reauthorization.
  • Axios reports that, despite the broad threat, a bill to reopen the Department of Homeland Security is being treated as exempt and is something Trump would sign, according to an official quoted citing the Washington Examiner.
  • Trump told CBS News earlier in the day that the Iran war 'is very complete, pretty much,' and told House Republicans 'we've already won, but we haven't won enough' while saying the conflict would be over 'soon, very soon' but not this week.
  • Trump claimed Democrats have stopped using the word 'affordability,' even as the piece notes Democrats are expected to keep hammering him over inflation and higher gas prices tied to the Iran war.
10:40 PM
Trump tells Republicans that passing the SAVE Act would "guarantee the midterms"
https://www.facebook.com/TakeoutPodcast/
New information:
  • CBS quotes Trump telling Republicans that passing the SAVE Act would 'guarantee the midterms,' explicitly linking the bill to GOP electoral prospects.
  • The segment reiterates that Trump is vowing not to sign any bills until the Senate passes the SAVE Act, framed as adding 'strict new voting requirements across the country.'
  • CBS congressional reporter Taurean Small is identified as providing additional context on the standoff in a dedicated segment, underscoring that this is now a central Capitol Hill fight.
9:35 PM
Trump, Thune clash on voter ID ultimatum as GOP remains divided on path forward
Fox News
New information:
  • A White House official told Fox News Trump’s ‘will not sign other Bills’ ultimatum applies to bills other than DHS funding, saying he will sign a DHS funding bill if Democrats pass it.
  • Senate Majority Leader John Thune acknowledged ‘a lot of really strong support’ among Republican senators for the SAVE America Act’s policy but said the process and path to a result are ‘still unclear’ and criticized pressure for a talking filibuster as coming from a ‘paid influencer ecosystem.’
  • Senate Majority Whip John Barrasso said Republicans’ current top priority is reopening DHS and blamed Democrats for blocking funding, calling terrorism the greatest threat to Americans.
  • Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer reiterated his opposition, labeling the SAVE America Act ‘Jim Crow 2.0,’ asserting it would ‘disenfranchise tens of millions,’ and declaring that if Trump refuses to sign bills without it, there will be ‘total gridlock’ because Senate Democrats will not help pass it ‘under any circumstances.’
  • The article notes competing floor‑time demands, including a large affordable‑housing package Trump supports, a likely supplemental Iran‑war munitions bill, and confirmation of DHS‑nominee Sen. Markwayne Mullin.
11:20 AM
Iran picks new leader. And, Trump won't sign bills until Congress overhauls voting
NPR by Brittney Melton
New information:
  • NPR states that Trump threatened yesterday to withhold his signature from all bills until Congress passes the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act, framing it as a demand to change voter registration and voting rules to require proof of citizenship with documents.
  • The article reinforces that this is a blanket threat covering all legislation, not just election‑related bills, although it does not materially expand on the policy provisions beyond proof‑of‑citizenship requirements.
  • NPR’s framing positions the ultimatum as part of a broader standoff over voting rules and congressional action in the early stages of the Iran war, linking foreign conflict and domestic election policy in a single political play.
March 08, 2026
7:48 PM
Trump says he won't sign bills until Congress overhauls voting
NPR by Luke Garrett
New information:
  • NPR specifies Trump’s latest social‑media post on Sunday, March 8, in which he writes, "I, as President, will not sign other Bills until this is passed," referring to the SAVE America Act.
  • The article details that the bill would require voters to prove citizenship with a document such as a U.S. passport or birth certificate plus a valid photo ID, and reminds readers that non‑citizen voting in federal elections is already illegal.
  • Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer publicly responds on X that Democrats will not support the SAVE America Act "under any circumstances" and predicts "total gridlock in the Senate."
  • NPR notes that Senate Majority Leader John Thune continues to reject Trump’s pressure campaign to scrap or weaken the filibuster, saying GOP senators do not back rule changes.
  • The piece clarifies that even if Trump refuses to sign bills, the Constitution allows them to become law after 10 days if Congress remains in session, leaving the practical impact of his threat uncertain.
  • The White House and offices of Speaker Mike Johnson and Sen. Thune did not immediately respond when asked whether Trump would sign DHS funding or an Iran war supplemental under this pledge.
6:14 PM
Trump says nothing else gets signed until Congress passes his voting bill
Axios by Avery Lotz
New information:
  • Axios reports Trump posted Sunday on Truth Social that he ‘won't sign any bills’ until Congress passes the SAVE America Act, saying ‘It must be done immediately. It supersedes everything else.’
  • The piece notes Trump is now explicitly demanding provisions to further restrict mail‑in voting and gender‑affirming care beyond what is in the House‑passed SAVE America Act, though it is unclear if he wants a new bill or amendments.
  • Axios adds a procedural clarification that if Trump refuses to sign a bill while Congress remains in session for 10 days, it becomes law without his signature, but an adjournment during that period would kill the bill (pocket veto).
  • Senate Majority Leader John Thune is described as skeptical of using a talking filibuster to pass the bill, despite Trump praising activist Scott Presler for pushing that tactic.
  • Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer responds ‘so be it,’ vowing Senate Democrats will not help pass the SAVE Act ‘under any circumstances,’ while Rep. Maxwell Frost dismisses Trump’s threat by noting Congress ‘ain't passing any bills anyways.’
  • Axios reiterates that noncitizen voting, which Republicans cite as a justification for the bill, is already illegal and rare, citing prior reporting by Jason Lalljee.
5:08 PM
Trump vows block on signing new laws until SAVE America Act passes Senate
Fox News
New information:
  • Trump posted on Truth Social that he, as president, "will not sign other Bills" until the SAVE America Act is passed by the Senate and specified that it must not be a "watered down" version.
  • Trump’s post lays out explicit policy demands for the bill: mandatory voter ID and proof of citizenship, severe limits on mail-in ballots (only for military, illness, disability, travel), and provisions forbidding "men in women’s sports" and "transgender mutilization for children."
  • The piece details internal GOP resistance to using a talking filibuster to force action on the bill, including opposition from former GOP leader Mitch McConnell and concern that a talking filibuster would "waste time" for Senate Republicans.
  • It notes that Senate Majority Leader John Thune has promised a vote on the SAVE America Act but has not committed to the talking filibuster tactic favored by Sen. Mike Lee and Trump.
  • The article flags that Sen. Markwayne Mullin’s pending move to become DHS secretary could shrink the GOP Senate margin by the end of March, complicating vote arithmetic.
  • Senate GOP Whip John Barrasso, in a TV interview, stresses that Republicans must first fund DHS and blames Democrats for blocking that funding while the SAVE America Act sits in the Senate.