WASHINGTON – A new CBS News/YouGov poll found that 80 percent of Americans support requiring a valid photo ID to vote, giving Republicans fresh ammunition as the U.S. Senate takes up the SAVE Act in a sharply divided debate over election security and ballot access. The survey, conducted March 16 through March 19, found support for photo ID requirements across party lines, including 95 percent of Republicans, 65 percent of Democrats, and 79 percent of independents. The poll also found strong support among white, Black, and Hispanic Americans.

The poll lands as the Senate continues consideration of the Republican-backed SAVE Act, a measure aimed at tightening voter registration requirements for federal elections. Under the proposal, applicants would be required to provide documentary proof of U.S. citizenship, such as a REAL ID, passport, or birth certificate, when registering to vote. The bill also seeks to remove non-citizens from voter rolls, placing election integrity at the center of the latest Capitol Hill fight.

Republicans have framed the bill as a necessary safeguard against fraud and unlawful voting, arguing that citizenship verification and voter identification are basic protections most Americans already support. Democrats, meanwhile, have pushed back by arguing the legislation goes too far and could create burdens for eligible voters who may not have immediate access to the documents required under the bill.

The Senate has already cleared an initial procedural hurdle. On March 17, senators voted 51-48 to begin debate on the legislation, but that did not guarantee final passage. Because the bill is moving through a chamber where most legislation still faces the 60-vote filibuster threshold, the measure remains in a difficult position despite Republican support and favorable polling on voter ID.

As of Friday, March 20, the Senate schedule showed the chamber resuming consideration of the House message tied to S.1383, the legislative vehicle for the SAVE Act. However, the listed roll call vote for Friday was on a cloture motion related to DHS appropriations, not final passage of the SAVE Act itself.

https://www.democrats.senate.gov/floor/senate-schedule

Based on that schedule, the measure could see additional procedural action at any time the Senate remains on it, but there was no publicly posted final-vote time yet. In practical terms, that means the bill is still being debated, and any final vote would depend on whether Senate leaders move to force the next procedural step and whether they believe they have enough support to advance it.

The fight is shaping up as both a legislative and political battle. Republicans are using the bill to spotlight election security ahead of the 2026 midterms, while Democrats are casting it as a federal overreach that could suppress legal voters. With the Senate still split and the filibuster looming, the measure’s immediate future remains uncertain even as public support for photo ID appears overwhelmingly strong.

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of

0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
wpDiscuz
Exit mobile version