Tuesday, March 17, 2026

REPUBLICANS WHO DO NOT SUPPORT TRUMP'S AGENDA ARE THREATENED BY THE PRESIDENT

Trump's SAVE America Act is doomed for a simple reason as he rages against 'sick and demented' Republican holdouts

 

By Victoria Churchill 

 

Daily Mail

Mar 17, 2026

 

 

President Donald Trump during an event in Hebron, Kentucky on March 11, 2026

"Only sick, demented, or deranged people could vote against the Save America Act," President Trump wrote on Truth Social, threatening to campaign against any Republican who defies him. 

 

Donald Trump's controversial SAVE America Act is doomed to fail in the Senate.

The bill - a cornerstone of Trump's MAGA agenda - needs 60 votes to pass in the Senate. It narrowly squeaked over the finish line on Tuesday for a 'test' vote that only required a simple majority.

The legislation, officially called the Save America Voting Eligibility Act, would require proof of U.S. citizenship to cast a ballot, a measure Trump has spent weeks demanding as essential to 'protect American elections.'

Proof means supplying a passport, birth certificate, or REAL ID explicitly showing citizenship. Student IDs and utility bills don't qualify. 

Trump issued a stark warning to any GOP holdouts on his signature legislation. 

'Only sick, demented, or deranged people could vote against the Save America Act,' he wrote on Truth Social, threatening to campaign against any Republican who defies him. 

'Each one of these votes will be used against them - a guaranteed loss,' he went on.

The president has made the bill a personal crusade, declaring that he will not sign any other legislation until the Senate passes it. 

 

The legislation, officially called the Save America Voting Eligibility Act, would require proof of U.S. citizenship to cast a ballot, a measure Trump has spent weeks demanding as essential to 'protect American elections'

The legislation, officially called the Save America Voting Eligibility Act, would require proof of U.S. citizenship to cast a ballot, a measure Trump has spent weeks demanding as essential to 'protect American elections'

Senate Majority Leader John Thune speaks during a press conference

Senate Majority Leader John Thune speaks during a press conference

 

That is now becoming a headache for Senate Majority Leader John Thune. 

'It supersedes everything else,' Trump wrote earlier this month, calling the measure 'one of the most important and consequential pieces of legislation in American history.'

The first vote, a procedural step to open debate, needed just 51 senators to pass. Fifty of the 53 Senate Republicans pledged support, enough to move it forward. But that's where it is doomed to be tied up forever.

North Carolina Senator Thom Tillis, who is not seeking reelection, did not vote on the bill, and Alaska Senator Lisa Murkowski, who has previously been elected as a write-in candidate and is not up again until 2028, voted no. Senator Mitch McConnell was the 51st affirmative vote.

Senator Susan Collins, a vulnerable GOP incumbent up again this November, became the 50th backer of the bill last week, a move for which she was thanked by House Republican Anna Paulina Luna with a delivery of 50 white roses to Collins' office. 

 

People wait in line to vote on Florida's last early voting day for the 2024 presidential election in Florida, at the Miami-Dade County Elections Department in Miami, Florida, USA, 03 November 2024

People wait in line to vote on Florida's last early voting day for the 2024 presidential election in Florida, at the Miami-Dade County Elections Department in Miami, Florida, USA, 03 November 2024

Social security number and California driving license with passport on US dollar money bills close up 

Close up photograph of passport, social security card and driverlicense

 

Trump has insisted that the Senate version should go even further — calling for voter ID, proof of citizenship, strict limits on mail-in ballots, and even bans on transgender surgeries for minors and biological men competing in women's sports.

That's created a rift with House Republicans, who passed a 'watered-down' version last month that focused solely on election rules.

Meanwhile, deepening the standoff between the chambers, hardline House conservatives threatened to tank other Senate-passed bills — beginning with a routine small-business measure- until the SAVE Act clears Congress. Only 40 House Republicans voted against the small business bill on Tuesday, which saw the measure pass.

With the Senate now preparing for days of high-stakes debate and talk of a possible filibuster showdown, Washington is once again at the center of a Trump-fueled standoff — and the stakes for both parties couldn't be higher.

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