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House Republicans resurrect Save America Act by adding it to spending bill
A person drops off a mail-in ballot on 15 October 2024 in Doylestown, Pennsylvania. Photograph: Hannah Beier/Getty Images View image in fullscreen A person drops off a mail-in ballot on 15 October 2024 in Doylestown, Pennsylvania. Photograph: Hannah Beier/Getty Images House Republicans resurrect Save America Act by adding it to spending bill Effort is latest attempt to pass bill that seeks to ban mail-in ballots and imposes voter identification requirements House Republicans on Wednesday made another attempt to answer Donald Trump’s demand for new restrictions on voting nationwide by linking the measure to an unrelated spending bill and passing both largely along party lines. The effort was the latest attempt by congressional Republicans to pass the Save America Act, which would ban mail-in ballots and impose new identification requirements on voters when they register and cast ballots. While the Trump administration has cast the bill as necessary to prevent non-citizens from voting and combat election fraud, voting rights advocates say there’s no evidence of widespread election tampering and warn the bill could disenfranchise swaths of eligible voters ahead of November’s midterm elections. The House of Representatives approved a version of the bill in February, but it has no path to passing the Senate, where top Democrats oppose the measure and can wield the filibuster to halt its advancement. Rightwing House Republicans have nonetheless insisted that their leaders make the bill a priority, and Speaker Mike Johnson agreed to a plan to combine the Save America Act with a bill authorizing spending by the state department and related agencies, which the House passed by a 217-209 vote on Wednesday afternoon. The Senate’s top Democrat Chuck Schumer vowed to again block the measure, as his party did when majority leader John Thune earlier this year opened debate on the Save America Act under pressure from Trump and his allies. “I’ll say it as many times as it takes: the [Save America] Act is dead on arrival here in the Senate,” Schumer said ahead of the House vote. “I don’t care how Republicans try to package their plan to resurrect the old ghost of Jim Crow – we will kill it.” Trump has repeatedly insisted that Congress’s Republican majorities approve the Save America Act, going as far as to disrupt the legislative agenda to underscore the seriousness of his demands. He has tied its passage to the renewal of a foreign surveillance law that expired last month, and refused to sign a federal housing policy bill that was approved with bipartisan support in protest of the lack of progress on Save America. The housing measure went into law last week without his signature. Answering the president’s call, conservative House lawmakers late last month effectively shut down the chamber’s floor by opposing procedural motions that must pass before legislation can be voted on. They relented earlier this week, backing Johnson’s plan to link Save America to appropri