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The ongoing debate over voter ID laws continues to stir controversy as Senate Democrats criticize the GOP’s latest legislative effort, likening it to the oppressive segregationist laws of the past. However, the bill’s main proponent in the Senate, Republican Senator Mike Lee of Utah, dismisses these accusations as unfounded and exaggerated.
In a recent conversation with Fox News Digital, Senator Lee described the Democrats’ objections as a “paranoid fantasy,” labeling their arguments as “absurd” and accusing them of being out of touch with reality. “They should be ashamed to make them,” Lee asserted, defending the intentions behind the legislation.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, a Democrat from New York, has been particularly vocal in his opposition, characterizing the Safeguarding American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) America Act as “Jim Crow 2.0.” This bill, which successfully passed in the House and is now championed by Lee in the Senate, seeks to implement measures such as requiring a photo ID for voting in federal elections, proof of citizenship for voter registration, and maintaining accurate voter rolls by removing ineligible voters.
Despite these measures, Schumer and his Democratic colleagues argue that the legislation would serve as a mechanism of voter suppression, disproportionately affecting low-income Americans and minority communities. They plan to block the bill’s progress in the Senate, standing firm in their belief that it undermines equal access to voting.
In contrast, Senator Lee contends that the requirements outlined in the bill are commonplace and necessary for many aspects of everyday life, such as purchasing firearms or completing tax documentation for employment. By drawing these parallels, Lee aims to emphasize the practicality and fairness of the proposed voter ID requirements.
But Lee argued that providing identification or proof of citizenship is routine in everyday life — whether undergoing a background check to buy a firearm or filling out tax forms when starting a new job.
“By their logic, it’s Jim Crow to require somebody to establish citizenship before taking a job with a new employer, and that’s insane,” Lee said.
“And so then they argue here, well, voting is so fundamental, and we have constitutional protections protecting our right to vote,” he continued.
“Well, we’ve got constitutional protections protecting our right to bear arms, and yet that doesn’t cause us to dispense with proving who you are and your eligibility to buy a gun. This has just been insane.”
Without Democratic support, however, the pathway to sending the legislation to President Donald Trump’s desk is complicated.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., has vowed to bring the SAVE America Act to the floor, and Republicans have the votes to move it through its first key procedural hurdle.
From there, Democrats can block it with the 60-vote filibuster, which Lee often refers to as the “zombie” filibuster.
Eliminating the filibuster is out of the question for several of Lee’s colleagues, but Republicans are warming to reinstating a talking, or standing, filibuster, which would require Senate Democrats to make their case against the bill on the floor over hours of debate.
Trump has already suggested he would issue an executive order if the legislation fails, which Lee declined to speculate on without first knowing what exactly would be done.
But he noted that it was all the more reason to pass the SAVE America Act, given the ever-swinging political pendulum in Washington, DC.
“It’s still really critically important that we pass this law, because let’s assume that he issued such an order, and that it does most or all of what we needed to do here, that gives us protection for the moment, to whatever degree he’s able to do that through an executive action,” Lee said.
“But we need something that can last longer than he’s in office.”