Nearly All Dems Oppose SAVE Act Despite Broad Public Support for Voter ID
- Ava Williams
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The fight over the SAVE America Act is no longer a narrow policy dispute; it has become a raw test of trust between the public and the political class. On one side are polls showing overwhelming support for voter ID and proof-of-citizenship requirements, cutting across race and party. On the other are Democratic lawmakers nearly united in resistance, warning of mass purges and disenfranchisement if the bill becomes law.
Republicans insist the measure simply enforces what Americans already believe is true: that only citizens should decide federal elections, and that proving it should be as routine as showing ID at an airport. Democrats counter that the bill’s verification machinery could wrongly strip legitimate voters from the rolls, especially in communities that already face bureaucratic hurdles. As the Senate showdown looms, the question is no longer just who votes, but whether Washington will dare to cross its own voters on the most basic question in a democracy: whose voice counts.