Why Passing the SAVE Act Might End Republican Rule
The obscenely named "SAVE" Act would prevent millions of Republican women from voting
Republicans have been overreaching ever since Herr TrumpEpshTeen violated the White House.
But this thing they’re trying to ram through the Senate right now as part of a last-ditch effort to unpend the Midterms, which are destined to end Republican control of Congress, might bite them in the ass even harder than it will Democrats.
Let me explain why.
Republican trad wives will be disenfranchised
If you haven’t heard about the so-called SAVE Act, it’s a pet project of Herr TrumpEpshTeen by which he wants to accomplish two things:
Prevent women from voting
Prevent women from voting
He’s not a misogynist. He’s something else. A word we haven’t invented. Something that signifies hatred on a unique level. The only reason women are in his “administration,” to use the word loosely, is to serve as objects to throw under the rare bus in this, this second term of absurd fealty to a madman.
The bus Susie Wiles finally finds herself under will be the size of one of Hegseth’s broken-down aircraft carriers.
The regime would also like to formalize the process of acquiring all of the nation’s voter information from each state, but to be honest, the current version of the bill is so full of obfuscation that I can’t quite tell if it gets them there. Older versions of it did, but either Senate Republicans nuked that portion of the bill or are hiding it better than usual with stuff like this:
(2) Information on mail voter registration form—Section 9(b)(4) of such Act (52U.S.C. 20508(b)(4)) is amended—
(A) by redesignating clauses (i) through (iii) as subparagraphs (A) through (C), respectively; and(B) in subparagraph (C) (as so redesignated and as amended by paragraph (1)(C)), by striking ‘‘; and’’ and inserting the following:
That’s real text from the real bill.
Crazy thought: Let’s demand that Congress write a bill that doesn’t let them write crap like that.
The regime’s seizure of Fulton County voter rolls was illegal. The courts will eventually force the regime to return the data to Fulton County. The regime and its congressional stooges want to “fix” that by creating something called the “SAVE” system, which would require states to share their voter information during each election with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
So far, the SAVE system looks to be something states can use when seeking info from the feds, but earlier versions of the bill included provisions to formally snatch voter rolls out of the hands of states.
This bill establishes the SAVE system infrastructure in such a way that it’s just a matter of flipping a switch to turn it into a voter data collection mechanism. If Republicans stay in office, they’ll flip that switch. If they don’t stay in office, they’ll patiently wait until they are again, just like they waited patiently for forty years to tear up Roe v. Wade.
That elections have nothing to do with “homeland security” isn’t an issue when you’re building an authoritarian state.
Voter disenfranchisement will hurt Republicans more than Democrats
The voter suppression legislation of the “SAVE” Act, generally, is so sweeping that Republican women will also be caught up in its sticky strands of deceit.
Trad wives across America will carry their lap poodles with them to the voting booth and get turned away by precinct captains. They’ll have no idea what hit them.
Meanwhile, Democratic women will spend weeks researching the rules and then travel thousands of miles to their original county of birth to acquire their birth certificate if that’s what they need to do.
If they’re using a different name than their maiden name, they’ll fix that, too. They’ll complain about it, like they should, but they’ll do it. Republican women, and quite a few Republican men, will simply be caught unawares.
Republicans think they’re snatching voting rights away from enough Democrats to make a difference in the midterms. This is because they’re racist and assume “minorities” will be too caught off guard to respond.
I think the opposite will happen. Democratic voters are typically better educated about everything, including voting requirements. Most of them, for example, can find Iran on a map.
Republican office seekers specialize in seeking out low-information voters and dummies. Their voters will suffer higher rates of disenfranchisement than Democratic voters will.
Let’s take a look at what this insidious monster is trying to do.
A quick primer on the Destroy American Voter Eligibility (DAVE) Act
The SAVE Act, a Republican DoubleSpeak name if there ever was one, is the acronym for the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act. From here on out, I’ll refer to it by its correct name, as established by me: The Destroy American Voter Eligibility Act (DAVE).
The DAVE Act requires newly registered voters to present REAL IDs or specific types of government IDs (like military IDs or passports) when registering. There has been some confusion around the bill because its main sponsor, Representative Chip Roy of Texas, purposely made certain parts of it vague so that county clerks in red states could hide behind the obfuscation and rip away the voting rights of so-called minorities.
It should be noted, too, that the act is the first step in federalizing elections at the national level. Election rules and regulations are traditionally managed by states and couny clerks.
Most of the confusion centers around which states’ REAL IDs qualify as satisfying the requirements of the act. By making the rules intentionally vague, and by sneaking in federal access to voting rolls, the act makes it easier to steal elections.
Consider this scenario: You register with your REAL ID, usually a driver’s license. The county clerk accepts your ID and registers you. Then, when you vote, your vote gets challenged by Republicans after they lose. They say you didn’t register with the “right kind” of REAL ID.
Then, DHS accesses voter rolls and makes the initial challenges a moot point by changing votes so that when they issue formal challenges, the votes are corrupted when recounted and/or validated.
Anybody who doesn’t think that’s possible has missed the last year of corruption by this regime.
Who Needs a Passport? Everyone? Or….?
The DAVE Act requires everyone registering to vote to prove they are a citizen by presenting a driver’s license that qualifies under the REAL ID Act of 2005 (there are other options to prove it, like passports, but this is the main area of confusion).
There’s a legit question about the nature of REAL IDs and whether or not most people registering will qualify with a driver’s license, even if they have a REAL ID driver’s license.
What’s a REAL ID? Anyone who’s received a driver’s license during the last couple of years probably has one.
The REAL ID Act of 2005 established federal security standards for state-issued driver’s licenses and identification cards. For example, in Georgia, which has a big Senate election coming up, the state Department of Motor Vehicles began issuing REAL IDs several years ago to meet the law’s deadline.
You can’t fly without one, so if you’ve flown anywhere since the law was finally enacted on May 7, 2025, you have a REAL ID. A passport counts, as do state driver’s licenses and identification cards issued since May 7, 2025 (and, in most states, before).
Here’s where the question of whether your REAL ID qualifies comes in
The consensus in our echo chamber of resistance is that we’re all going to need a passport to vote. This is because there are two types of REAL ID driver’s licenses:
The kind most of us who’ve received one since states adopted the REAL ID Act of 2005, or…
… A special “enhanced version” that has a fancy decal on it saying you’re a U.S. citizen.
The Real ID Act of 2005 is clear: if you claim to be a U.S. citizen, you can’t get a REAL ID without presenting proof of your citizenship. Requirements met.
I’m not aware of either the DAVE Act or the Real ID Act of 2005, upon which the DAVE Act’s requirements are based, addressing enhanced Driver’s licenses. There are only 5 states with those. If that is the interpretation of the law, which it can’t be since it isn’t mentioned in either statute, then almost every newly registered voter will need a passport.
But I don’t see anything in either statute that says anything about this.
So right away, the moment the DAVE Act becomes law, it will get hit with lawsuits.
The DAVE Act specifically says this about REAL ID requirements:
(1) A form of identification issued consistent with the requirements of the REAL ID Act of 2005 that indicates the applicant is a citizen of the United States.
The REAL ID Act of 2005, in turn, states:
EVIDENCE OF LAWFUL STATUS- A State shall require, before issuing a driver’s license or identification card to a person, valid documentary evidence that the person-- (i) is a citizen or national of the United States;
Since most of us who have acquired a REAL ID driver’s license have done that, we have complied with the law and should be able to challenge anyone who says otherwise in court. Why? Because the law says I’ve done my duty as a citizen. The law doesn’t state anything explicitly about an enhanced REAL ID.
I applied.
I presented proof of U.S. citizenship.
The state issued a REAL ID.
Case closed.
Disclaimer: I’m not a lawyer, but some of my fictional characters in my various stories and novels are. That should count for something (although it probably doesn’t).
Let’s take a closer look at the key lines in the DAVE Act (note the word in bold, as that is very important language):
(b) DOCUMENTARY PROOF OF UNITED STATES CITIZENSHIP.—As used in this Act, the term ‘documentary proof of United States citizenship’ means, with respect to an applicant for voter registration, any of the following:
(1) A form of identification issued consistent with the requirements of the REAL ID Act of 2005 that indicates the applicant is a citizen of the United States.
The rest of that is a list of alternatives, like a military ID or a passport.
I’ll repeat myself. Requirements met, Mr. Chip Roy. Go check your kids’ closets for guns and leave me alone.
Speaking of guns, it’s getting easier to own a gun in the United States than it is to vote. I guess that’s another article.
The list continues…
(2) A valid United States passport.
(3) The applicant’s official United States military identification card, together with a United States military record of service showing that the applicant’s place of birth was in the United States.
Now, let’s look again at the REAL ID Act of 2005, because that is also a source of confusion. The DAVE Act lists a driver’s license that is:
A form of identification issued consistent with the requirements of the REAL ID Act of 2005 that indicates the applicant is a citizen of the United States
But since so many people get their information from AI these days, they’re being told that only five states in the nation issue licenses with such compliance.
Here’s a typical AI response:
All 50 U.S. states and the District of Columbia are compliant with the REAL ID Act of 2005, and all are currently issuing REAL ID-compliant driver’s licenses and ID cards.
However, a standard REAL ID-compliant card (usually marked with a star) does not necessarily indicate U.S. citizenship, as non-citizen lawful permanent residents and certain visa holders can obtain them.
To specifically indicate U.S. citizenship on a compliant card, you are referring to an Enhanced Driver’s License (EDL). Only 5 states currently issue EDLs that explicitly indicate U.S. citizenship:
Michigan
Minnesota
New York
Vermont
Washington
But neither the SAVE (DAVE) Act nor the REAL ID Act of 2005 addresses this. Neither act mentions enhanced REAL IDs.
I don’t think anyone knows where any of this will finally land. It can definitely be argued that all 50 states currently issue driver’s licenses that are in compliance with the REAL ID Act of 2005, and thus are fully compliant with this ridiculous proposed law.
If I’m wrong, it means that only five states currently issue compliant driver’s licenses, which in turn means almost everybody who registers to vote will need to pay a poll tax by paying for a passport.
Poll taxes are unconstitutional, which in turn puts the act in jeopardy of immediate death by even this corrupted version of the Supreme Court.
Let’s assume the worst
Let’s assume the worst, though. The bill passes, and the Supreme Court upholds it as the law of the land because they’re paid a shit ton of under-the-table money by various rich incubi with a passion for sucking the blood out of the rest of us.
If that happens, my bet is that the low information voters that have been such suckers for Republican propaganda will sit out the midterms.
The excited voter, the one who has been reading Substack resistance articles, will do whatever it takes to comply with the law no matter how much they hate it.
And they’ll vote out Republicans in such sweeping numbers that Republican politicians will need to learn a new profession to cheat in.
My guess is that as the walls of Epstein come crashing down on the worst human being in modern history, there will be very little taste for voting for the people who enabled his endless corruption anyway. The incentive to vote will become deflated by the depth of the Epstein scandal, which is about to break open big time.
Those automatons who remain loyal will be so lost with these new voting requirements that, if passed, they’ll just stay home and overdose on their drug of choice.
Notes
For the full text of the REAL ID Act of 2005:
https://www.dhs.gov/xlibrary/assets/real-id-act-text.pdf
There are several versions of the so-called SAFE Act. If you want to do your own homework, be sure you look at the correct one. The one before the Senate right now is called:
US HB22 | 2025-2026 | 119th Congress | Engrossed
US Congress House Bill 22
It can be found here:
https://legiscan.com/US/text/HB22/2025
If the Senate makes amendments to the bill, this link will be outdated at that time.
Thanks for reading!




In my opinion, you should mention why the TRUMP government wants voter data. In the case of red states it is likely to update the data base of the HERITAGE FOUNDATION to provide lists of "questionable" voters to be provided to VIGILANTES, to be send to state county clerks for their removal from the rolls, as permitted by legislation in red states (see the VIGILANTES INC video at gregpalast.com ).
Where to start? I’ve been off the internet for awhile. I want to say to all the Republican women who voted for trump: What in the blue fuck were you thinking? It’s fine that trump’s CV was more about sexually assaulting women, portraying the worst kind of misogynistic, racist, ableist, and bigoted behaviour? How in hell could a woman anywhere vote for this vile person? I really hope you get some kind of retribution for what you’ve done. You stupid fucks.
That’s all I have to say, Charles. I hope you’re well.