. Skip to main content
The U.S. Capitol building photographed with red and blue lighting, representing the partisan debate over the SAVE America Act.

Can You Prove You're a Citizen? The SAVE America Act Explained

March 9, 2026

Can You Prove You're a Citizen? The SAVE America Act Explained

Can you prove you're a citizen? A new bill moving through Congress would require a passport or birth certificate just to register to vote, and millions of eligible Americans may not have one. Here's what teachers and students need to know.

Share

Share On Facebook
Share On Twitter
Share On Pinterest
Share On LinkedIn
Email

Updated July 2, 2026, to reflect the Senate vote, the ongoing fight in Congress, and new state-level developments.

Think about the documents in your house right now. Do you know where your birth certificate is? Your passport? Could you find either one by tomorrow morning if your right to vote depended on it?

This is not a hypothetical. It is the question at the center of one of the biggest political fights in Washington. The SAVE America Act would require every American to show documentary proof of citizenship to register to vote in federal elections. Supporters say it protects election integrity. Critics say it would block millions of legal citizens from the ballot box.

The Senate voted the bill down in June, but the story didn't end there. The president has called it his top priority, House Republicans have shut down their own chamber's business trying to revive it, and versions of the law are already on the books in several states heading into the midterms.

In this lesson, students will explore what the bill does, why it keeps coming back, and what the fight means for American democracy in November 2026 and beyond.

Before you watch: What do you already know about how voter registration works in the United States? As you watch, jot down one question the video raises for you.

Remote video URL

The Breakdown: Who Gets to Vote if the SAVE America Act Becomes Law? 

The SAVE America Act passed the U.S. House of Representatives on Feb. 11, by a vote of 218 to 213. Every Republican voted yes; only one Democrat, Rep. Henry Cuellar of Texas, joined them.

The bill goes further than registration. It would require Americans to present a passport or birth certificate in person at an elections office to register to vote, show photo identification to cast a ballot in person, and submit a copy of an eligible ID when requesting and returning a mail ballot. It would also require states to share their voter rolls with the Department of Homeland Security to check for noncitizens.

Why Do Supporters Want It? 

Supporters argue it strengthens public confidence in elections. A 2024 Pew Research survey found 69 percent of Democrats and 95 percent of Republicans favor requiring government-issued ID to vote. The White House has also cited polling claiming 71 percent of Americans support the bill.

What Are the Concerns?  

The Constitution already prohibits noncitizens from voting, and study after study shows it happens in only "single digits per election year." A federal court in Kansas found that a similar state law blocked more than 31,000 eligible citizens from registering while only 39 noncitizens had improperly registered over 13 years — roughly 800 citizens blocked for every one noncitizen (Fish v. Schwab, formerly Fish v. Kobach). 

According to the Brennan Center, roughly 21 million voting-age Americans (about 1 in 10) lack ready access to a passport or birth certificate. There are deep historical reasons for this gap: During legal segregation, many Black Americans were denied hospital access at birth and never received birth certificates, and replacement documents can cost $50 or more today.

The documentation gap reaches further than many people realize. As many as 69 million American women have birth certificates that don't match their current legal names because they changed their surnames after marriage. Naturalized citizens face another risk: the bill would check voters against a Department of Homeland Security database that has been found to erroneously flag U.S. citizens.

What Happened in the Senate? 

After months of debate and pressure, the Senate officially voted down the SAVE America Act on June 4. President Trump had posted frequently about the bill, saying at one point he would not sign any other legislation until it passed and that it "supersedes everything else." Some Republicans pushed to eliminate the filibuster to force it through, but Senate Majority Leader John Thune concluded his party didn't have the appetite, telling reporters, "It's about the votes. It's about the math."

Even some Republicans balked. Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska opposed the bill, arguing the Constitution gives states authority over the "times, places, and manner" of elections and that one-size-fits-all federal mandates seldom work.

Where Things Stand Now (July 2026)

So it's over, right? Not exactly.

The president has continued calling the SAVE Act his "No. 1 priority," repeatedly urging Republicans to attach it to must-pass legislation — and even ordering Senate leaders to fire the nonpartisan Senate parliamentarian to clear a path.

In the House, the fight has ground Congress to a halt. The House has now passed the bill three times, and a group of conservatives has repeatedly blocked procedural votes, stalling even the annual defense bill, to pressure the Senate to act. The standoff sent the House into its July 4 recess early.

Meanwhile, the fight has moved to the states. Seven states have enacted SAVE Act–style laws since the 2024 election, and voters in six states will likely cast their 2026 midterm ballots under proof-of-citizenship rules.

Why the urgency? Polling suggests most Americans aren't asking for this. A New York Times/Siena poll found essentially zero percent of voters named "election integrity" as the country's most important problem, and a CNN poll found 57 percent of Americans believe the citizenship requirement would either mostly block legal citizens from voting or block citizens and noncitizens about equally. One senator was unusually candid about the timing: Sen. Mike Lee of Utah pointed to predictions that Democrats could win the Senate and urged colleagues to "turn this around" by passing the bill.

Key Terms/Cheat Sheet

  • Documentary Proof of Citizenship: Physical documents proving U.S. citizenship, typically a passport or birth certificate. Required under the SAVE America Act to register to vote.
  • Filibuster: A Senate procedure allowing the minority to block a vote. Requires 60 votes to overcome, more than Republicans currently have.
  • Nuclear Option: Eliminating the filibuster by simple majority vote. If Senate Republicans use it, the SAVE America Act could pass with 51 votes.
  • Reconciliation: A special Senate process that lets certain budget-related bills pass with 51 votes instead of 60, bypassing the filibuster. Supporters have explored using it to revive the SAVE Act.
  • Voter Roll Purge: Removing names from voter registration lists. The companion MEGA Act would require states to do this monthly, raising concerns about database errors knocking eligible voters off the rolls.
  • Disenfranchisement: Being blocked from voting, whether intentionally or as a side effect of a policy.
  • Article I, Section 4: The constitutional provision giving states primary responsibility for administering elections, the basis for likely legal challenges if the bill becomes law. 

Discussion Questions 

  • Does the SAVE America Act solve a real problem? Studies show only "single digits" of noncitizens vote each election year, yet the Kansas case found 800 citizens blocked for every one noncitizen. Is the problem this bill solves worth that tradeoff?
  • Who gets left behind when documents are required? Not everyone has easy access to a passport or birth certificate. What factors in someone's life (such as cost, location, or history) might make obtaining these documents difficult or impossible?
  • Who should control how elections are run? The Constitution gives states primary responsibility for running elections. Does the SAVE America Act respect that balance, or does it overstep federal authority?
  • How does voting rights history shape this debate? The Voting Rights Act of 1965 tore down barriers to voting, such as literacy tests. How does that history shape how different people view documentation requirements today?
  • What happens to real people if this passes too fast? Sample warned of "chaos" and an "upheaval of historic proportions" if the bill became law close to the 2026 midterms. Who would bear the heaviest burden of a rushed rollout?
  • Who should bear the burden of proving citizenship? Should voters prove their citizenship to the government, or should the government verify it on their behalf? What principle should guide that decision?
  • When does persistence become a warning sign? The Senate voted this bill down, yet it keeps coming back in new forms. When is persistence a sign of democratic conviction, and when is it something else?
  • How should motive shape this debate? One senator urged passage by pointing to predictions that his party could lose the Senate. Should lawmakers' motives change how citizens evaluate election rules?

Media Literacy Challenge

  • Who is talking and who is missing? The video features one legal expert. What perspective does he bring, and whose voices are absent?
  • Does a bill's name shape your opinion before you read it? The bill is called the SAVE America Act. Sample jokes about "clever naming devices." How do bill names influence public opinion before anyone reads the fine print?
  • Where does the 21 million number come from? Find the original study. Who conducted it, and does the methodology hold up? Start here.
  • What is the strongest argument on the other side? Find one credible source making the pro-SAVE Act case. What evidence do they use? Start here and analyze the argument.
  • Is the noncitizen voting claim supported by data? The video says noncitizen voting happens in "single digits per election year." Search for the data yourself. Does it hold up?
  • Two polls, two realities: The White House cites polling showing 71 percent of Americans support the SAVE America Act. A CNN poll from the same month found a majority believe the bill would block eligible citizens from voting. How can two polls about the same bill tell such different stories? Compare how each question was worded, who sponsored each poll, and what respondents were told about the bill before answering. Which methodology holds up better, and why?

Your Final Take 

Before we wrap up, answer this in two or three sentences:

The SAVE America Act is meant to protect elections. Based on what you learned today, do you think the benefits outweigh the costs, or do the costs outweigh the benefits? What is the one piece of evidence that most shapes your answer?

Your Questions, Answered

  • What is the SAVE America Act? It is a federal bill passed by the U.S. House of Representatives on Feb. 11 that would require Americans to show a passport or birth certificate to register to vote in federal elections. It now faces a Senate filibuster.
  • How many people could it affect? About 21 million voting-age Americans, roughly 1 in 10, do not have ready access to the required documents, according to the Brennan Center for Justice.
  • Has anything like this been tried before? Kansas enacted a similar state law. A federal court found it blocked over 31,000 eligible citizens from registering while only 39 noncitizens had improperly registered over 13 years (Fish v. Schwab).
  • Where can I find more classroom resources on voting rights and elections? Visit Share My Lesson's Election 2026 collection for a full collection of classroom-ready lessons on elections and civic participation, ideal for grades 6-12. 

2026 Election Lesson Plans and Resources

 

Explore our election resources to engage your students in learning about the election process and its significance at every level. Discover lessons on election fundamentals, laws, security, current events, youth involvement, and historic U.S. elections.

Andy Kratochvil
Andy Kratochvil is a proud member of the AFT Share My Lesson team, where he’s passionate about discovering and sharing top-tier content with educators across the country. He earned his bachelor’s degree in political science and French from California State University, Fullerton, and later completed... See More
Advertisement

Post a comment

Log in or sign up to post a comment.