Senate expected to take up voter ID bill opposed by Democrats – US politics live | US news


Controversial voter ID bill to be taken up by Senate after Trump threats

Hello and welcome to the US politics live blog.

The voter ID bill, would require proof of US citizenship for new voters, could be taken up by the Senate as early as today.

The Save America act is a rebranded name for the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility act, or the Save act, a bill that has been circulating through Congress in some version for more than two years.

The US House passed the bill earlier this year, but it faces steep odds in the Senate, where it will need 60 votes to move forward because of the filibuster rule. Republican senators face heavy lobbying to lift the filibuster to advance the act.

Democrats are uniformly opposed to the legislation and expected to block its passage through the Senate. They say the legislation would disenfranchise millions of American voters who don’t have birth certificates or other documents readily available – both Republicans and Democrats who would be newly registering to vote.

The bill would require voters to provide proof of citizenship when they register and to present approved identification when they go to the polls, among other new rules that Trump and his most loyal supporters are pushing as part of an effort to assert more federal control over elections.

Federal law already requires that voters in national elections be US citizens. But the legislation would lay out strict new requirements for voters to prove their status. Last week, Trump threatened not to sign any bills until Congress approves the legislation.

“All voters must show proof of citizenship in order to vote,” the US president said during remarks on Monday at a Republican event in Miami. “No mail-in ballots, except for illness, disability, military or travel.”

The bill also directs states to turn voter rolls over to the Department of Homeland Security for citizenship verification. The justice department has sought access to voter rolls in many states, including filing lawsuits in some.

Voting rights advocates have said the bill would effectively prevent millions of Americans from voting – only about half of people have a valid US passport, and other documents, such as birth certificates, may not match up with people’s names. They have called attention to impacts on married women who changed their names whose documents may not be updated, saying the act could cause additional hurdles to voting for them.

In other developments:

  • Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, denied that he is in talks with Steve Witkoff, Donald Trump’s real-estate pal turned chief diplomat, and accused the US of leaking false claims that the two are in direct contact to calm panicked markets.

  • After Trump claimed that he had spoken to a former US president who told him that he approved of his attack on Iran, all four living former presidents denied having spoken with Trump about Iran.

  • Trump publicly revealed details about a Republican congressman’s “terminal” diagnosis that could have left him “dead by June”, prompting Mike Johnson, speaker of the House, to say: “That wasn’t public.”

  • The appointment of a controversial slate of vaccine advisers by Robert F Kennedy Jr likely violated federal law, a federal judge ruled, and all votes taken by the committee over the past year have been stayed.

  • Gregory Bovino, the US border patrol chief and frequent Fox News guest who was the face of the Trump administration’s mass deportation efforts until the killing of two protesters in Minneapolis by federal agents, said he will retire within weeks.

  • Trump, who once mocked the gestures of a New York Times reporter with a congenital condition that limits his ability to move his joints, claimed that the governor of California’s dyslexia means that he is “dumb”.

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Illinois heads to elect next senator and five congressional district candidates

Rachel Leingang

Illinois voters on Tuesday will decide between a crowded field of Democratic candidates vying to be the state’s next senator as the midwestern state also nominates candidates for five open congressional seats.

Longtime Illinois senator Dick Durbin’s retirement leaves a competitive race that includes two US representatives and the lieutenant governor vying to replace him, with massive infusions of money coming to the candidates from outside groups, including donors affiliated with the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (Aipac), that are spending millions to sway voters.

The representatives running for Senate are leaving open contests for their seats, and other sitting Democratic representatives decided not to run for reelection. Among the contenders are seasoned politicians, former lawmakers seeking comebacks and progressive upstarts.

The open Senate and House seats in Democratic-leaning districts mean the primaries will likely decide who wins in the November general election. And because the state is reliably blue, the winners could be in office for long careers, like Durbin has been for over 29 years.

State-level races, including the governorship, are also on Tuesday’s ballot, with JB Pritzker running unopposed for a third term.

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