The SAVE Act is the centerpiece of President Trump’s fair elections agenda.
Democrats have other ideas.
And now Chuck Schumer just made this outrageous SAVE Act prediction.
As West Wing Daily reports:
Conservatives in the House of Representatives were looking to attach the SAVE Act to a must-pass funding bill to end a government shutdown that Schumer and the Democrats had instigated to defund mass deportations.
The SAVE Act would require proof of citizenship to vote in federal elections.
It would also mandate that states purge illegal aliens from the voter rolls.
And it would restrict the Democratic Party’s ability to run endless mail-in-voting operations in blue states.
Schumer declared the SAVE Act “dead on arrival” in the Senate.
In a subsequent speech on the Senate floor, Schumer assailed the SAVE Act as “Jim Crow.”
“I want to be very clear: the SAVE Act is dead on arrival in the Senate, and every single Senate Democrat would vote against any bill, any bill, that contains it. It is outrageous that House Republicans would even consider putting the SAVE Act in legislation to fund the government. Democrats have been clear for months that we will never in a million years consider this deeply restrictive and overreaching piece of legislation,” Schumer ranted.
“Now, as for the SAVE Act itself: it has nothing to do with protecting our elections and everything to do with federalizing voter suppression. The SAVE Act is nothing more than Jim Crow 2.0,” Schumer added.
Polls show Schumer is completely out of touch with Americans.
A 2025 Pew survey found 83 percent of Americans support voter ID.
Schumer and the Democrats oppose voter ID, claiming it’s racist.
But Pew found that 76 percent of black Americans support requiring ID to cast a ballot.
House Republicans say Senate Majority Leader John Thune can circumvent Schumer’s threat to kill the SAVE Act by forcing the Democrats to stage a talking filibuster.
That means Democrats can hold the floor for as long as each Democratic senator can deliver two speeches.
Once those speeches are over, Republicans can pass the SAVE Act with 51 votes.