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Will Republicans Fight For The Save Act - Or Fold Again?

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Will Republicans Fight For The SAVE Act - Or Fold Again?

Authored by Heather Higgins via RealClearPolitics,

Republicans didn’t win the Senate so their leaders could manage expectations. They won it to deliver results. Will Republicans leaders actually deliver? We are about to find out with the SAVE America Act.

The legislation requires proof of citizenship to vote in federal elections. That’s not some fringe idea. It’s the law of the land in nearly every nation in the world – and is one of the most widely supported election reforms in the United States.

A February Harvard CAPS/Harris poll found 85% of voters say only U.S. citizens should vote in American elections. The same survey found 71% support the SAVE America Act itself, 81% support voter ID, and 75% support proof of citizenship requirements. Perhaps most striking: Roughly 70% of Democratic voters support voter ID.

That’s not partisan territory, that’s consensus. When an issue commands that level of support, failure usually isn’t about policy. It’s about will.

Yet Senate Republicans still appear poised to treat the SAVE America Act like a messaging exercise: Debate it for a bit, eventually set up the opportunity for Democrats to kill it rather than having to vote on the bill, shrug, and move on.

That may satisfy the Senate’s procedural instincts, but it won’t satisfy voters. It certainly isn’t how Donald Trump gets a deal done. In “The Art of the Deal,” Trump laid out a strategy he has followed again and again with demonstrable success: seeking leverage, wearing down your opponent, fighting back hard and never folding, exerting time pressure and psychological pressure. 

Past Senate leaders have understood this works, and have used it themselves. In December 2009, Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid wanted The Affordable Care Act passed before Christmas. Several Democratic senators were balking.

Reid’s solution was blunt: No one goes home until the votes are there. The Senate stayed in session nearly a month and passed Obamacare on Christmas Eve. Senators whose votes hadn’t been there suddenly discovered ways to support it. Amazing what happens when missing Christmas becomes the alternative.

Senate leaders routinely use endurance and inconvenience as leverage – especially in budget fights. They keep the floor open overnight, run endless amendment votes, and threaten to blow through recess until the holdouts crack.

That kind of determination to change the dynamic when “the votes aren’t there” should not be reserved just for spending bills. The SAVE America Act is exactly the kind of issue where pressure works, and why Sen. Mike Lee of Utah is advocating restoring the standing filibuster for this bill – precisely to maximize leverage and pressure.

The recess threat isn't just about challenging Democrats' ideological commitment to unverified voting processes. It’s about the raw human cost of being physically trapped in Washington while your family, your staff, your donors, your fundraisers, and your district events – as well as your junkets and vacations – are elsewhere. That applies to every senator regardless of how committed they are to blocking the bill. 

And the 80%+ public support for common-sense voter ID creates a different kind of psychological pressure entirely. It's not just exhaustion; it's the daily political exposure of defending an unpopular position under a spotlight that a prolonged floor fight deliberately maintains.

This would be the application of Trump's doctrine, which isn't just about wearing down a monolithic opponent – it's about identifying the weakest link and applying pressure there. 

Remember, Democrats are politically exposed. Democrats must defend two Senate seats in 2026—including Georgia, where Sen. Jon Ossoff faces reelection in a state Trump carried, and Michigan, where Sen. Gary Peters’ retirement has created a competitive open seat.

Other Democratic incumbents – from Jeanne Shaheen in New Hampshire to Mark Warner in Virginia –  represent states where elections are often decided at the margins. Picture what a real floor fight would look like if John Thune were serious about getting the SAVE America Act passed.

The SAVE America Act stays on the Senate floor. No artificial deadline. No prearranged surrender through cloture vote. Republican leadership simply says: We are staying here until this bill passes – even if that means canceling spring recess.

The pressure wouldn’t be abstract. It would be personal.

A senator like Jon Ossoff – or any Democrat in a competitive state – would be faced with a brutal choice: Keep blocking a bill their own voters support overwhelmingly, while missing weeks of campaigning, or break ranks.

That’s exactly the kind of leverage Trump talks about. Find the pressure points. Apply force where the incentives are weakest. Keep the fight going until the opposition starts looking for the exit. Republicans don’t need to break the entire Democratic caucus. They need seven votes – really six if you think John Fetterman is smart and sensible.

Now add one more piece of leverage: Restore the standing filibuster so obstruction actually carries a cost. The Senate survived that rule for most of its history and its absence has helped turn the Senate from the world’s greatest deliberative body into the place where legislation dies in darkness.

If Democrats want to block the SAVE America Act, let them talk all night if necessary. Let them explain repeatedly why they oppose proof of citizenship to vote. Go on record with their condescending view that married females are too dimwitted to get new IDs (thank you Mazie Hirono), and their racist smears that minorities will struggle to get ID (thank you Chuck Schumer).  

The modern “silent filibuster” protects obstruction from accountability. A talking filibuster does the opposite – it puts obstruction on display.

Republicans campaigned on restoring integrity to elections. Passing the SAVE America Act should be treated as a blood oath, not a messaging exercise. Trump would understand that instinctively. The question is whether the Senate leadership does, because right now the country isn’t looking for performative politics. It’s looking for resolve and results. 

Sen. Thune, a “hybrid talking filibuster” is a good step, but ultimately what counts is delivering results, and Donald Trump, the dealmaster, shows how to get it done.

Tyler Durden Wed, 03/18/2026 - 08:05