This morning I went to pick up a copy of my daughter’s birth certificate. I walked in, gave her name and birthday to the woman at the counter, paid $15, and walked out with a certified copy. Nobody asked for my ID. Nobody asked my relationship to her. Nobody asked anything at all.
That piece of paper — obtainable by anyone willing to spend $15 and do five minutes of research — is the cornerstone document of the SAVE America Act’s entire voter verification system.
I want to talk about that. But first, I want to talk about something Republicans have been absolutely right about for decades.
You Cannot Stop Bad Actors by Burdening Good Ones
Republicans have made a consistent and intellectually honest argument about gun control for as long as I can remember: burdening law-abiding citizens doesn’t stop criminals.
When someone proposes a new background check requirement or waiting period, the response is immediate — criminals don’t buy guns through legal channels. They steal them. They use straw purchasers. They find workarounds. All you’ve done is add friction for the law-abiding citizen who just wants to protect their family, while the person who was never going to follow the law walks right around your barrier.
That’s not a crazy argument. The mechanism is real. Determined bad actors find workarounds. Burdens fall on people trying to do things the right way.
I’ve always found this argument compelling because it’s logically sound — not because of who’s making it.
Security Has to Precede the Requirement
The same party has made an equally consistent argument about immigration enforcement for thirty years: you can’t demand compliance with a law you were never willing to enforce.
When comprehensive immigration reform was proposed — a path to legal status for people already here, paired with stronger enforcement going forward — the Republican response was consistent and firm. Don’t promise us future enforcement while granting amnesty today. Secure the border first. Then we’ll talk about everything else.
That’s not an unreasonable position, and I’ll go further: I actually agree with part of it. I believe in a pathway to citizenship for people who have built lives here over decades — because we looked the other way for thirty-plus years, and there’s a moral debt in that. But I also believe the sequencing matters. If you open the pathway before the enforcement exists, you’ve created an incentive for a new wave of illegal crossings. The math isn’t complicated. Border security has to come first — not a wall necessarily, because determined people find ways around walls — but real enforcement, real deterrence, a clear and visible stance at the border that changes the calculation for someone deciding whether to attempt the crossing.
Security precedes the requirement. That’s the argument. I find it logically sound regardless of which party is making it or which right is being discussed.
The only question is whether you apply it consistently.
So Here’s My Problem
The SAVE America Act states its purpose plainly. The bill’s title is:
“Ensuring only citizens are registered to vote in elections for Federal office.”
The White House describes it simply:
“American citizens — and only American citizens — should decide American elections.”
Hard to argue with the goal. I don’t want non-citizens voting either. Nobody serious does. There are millions of Americans who genuinely believe it’s happening on a large scale — that registrations are being manufactured, identities stolen, elections stolen. Those concerns deserve a straight answer, not dismissal.
Here’s the straight answer: when you register to vote today, your name, date of birth, and either your driver’s license number or last four digits of your Social Security number are automatically cross-checked against DMV and Social Security Administration databases under the Help America Vote Act of 2002. A made-up person or a mismatched identity gets flagged. The system isn’t built on the honor system — it’s built on electronic verification against federal databases. Utah reviewed over 2 million registered voters in a comprehensive audit and found one confirmed non-citizen registration and zero non-citizen votes cast.
The system that exists is already doing the job. Which raises the real question: what exactly is the SAVE Act adding — and at what cost?
The Foundation Is Sand
The first assumption most people make when they hear about the SAVE Act is: ‘I have a REAL ID, so I’m fine.’ It’s a reasonable assumption. REAL ID was sold to the public as the new federal standard for identification. But for the overwhelming majority of Americans, it’s wrong.
Only 5 states — Michigan, Minnesota, New York, Vermont, and Washington — issue an enhanced driver’s license that actually indicates citizenship on the card itself. The other 45 states issue REAL IDs that meet federal security standards but say nothing about citizenship. Those cards do not satisfy the SAVE Act’s requirements on their own. Residents of 45 states who show up with the ID they were told was the new federal standard will still be turned away without additional documentation.
So what does most of the country actually use? The bill is explicit that:
“a government-issued photo ID that does not indicate birthplace or citizenship together with another specified document”
qualifies as acceptable proof. For most Americans, that means a standard driver’s license or non-citizenship REAL ID paired with a birth certificate. Which brings up a second assumption worth examining: that a driver’s license at least confirms the holder is here legally.
It doesn’t. A number of states — California, New York, Illinois, and others — issue driver’s licenses to undocumented immigrants specifically. A driver’s license establishes identity. It does not establish citizenship. So the entire weight of citizenship verification under this law falls on one document.
The birth certificate.
The one I obtained this morning for $15 with no questions asked. Because this morning I walked into a city clerk’s office, gave my daughter’s name and birthday, paid $15, and walked out with her certified birth certificate. Nobody asked who I was. Name and date of birth are not secrets. They’re on social media profiles, obituaries, public records, and data broker websites.
The bill specifies that a valid birth certificate must have:
“the signature of an individual who is authorized to sign birth certificates on behalf of the State, unit of local government, or Tribal government in which the applicant was born”
and
“the seal of the State, unit of local government, or Tribal government that issued the birth certificate.”
What it doesn’t specify is how to prevent anyone from obtaining one.
For someone willing to commit fraud, obtaining someone else’s birth certificate is trivial — name and date of birth are public record. But for a legitimate voter, gathering their own documentation means time off work, fees they may not be able to afford, and navigating a bureaucracy that doesn’t always cooperate. The burden falls entirely on the honest citizen.
By the Republican party’s own standard — you cannot stop bad actors by burdening good ones — this fails.
The Sequencing Problem
Now apply the second argument: security has to precede the requirement.
More than 21 million voting-age Americans don’t have proof of citizenship readily available. Many are elderly. Many are low income. Many are naturalized citizens whose documents are complicated to replace. Many are people who have voted faithfully in every election for fifty years and have never needed a passport because they’ve never left their state.
The bill does include an alternative process — applicants who can’t produce documentation may:
“sign an attestation under penalty of perjury that the applicant is a citizen of the United States and eligible to vote in elections for Federal office”
But that process is left entirely to individual states to design, with no funding, no timeline, and no standards for what counts as sufficient. And the bill exposes election officials to criminal penalties for registering an applicant who fails to present documentary proof of citizenship, even if that applicant is in fact a U.S. citizen. Officials processing these alternative attestations face up to five years in prison for an honest mistake. The predictable result is that many will simply reject anything they’re unsure about, because the personal risk isn’t worth it.
Before you impose the requirement, you have to build the infrastructure that makes compliance possible for everyone. The SAVE Act skips that step entirely.
By the Republican party’s own standard — security has to precede the requirement — this also fails.
One More Thing: You Cannot Charge a Tax to Exercise a Right
The 24th Amendment abolished poll taxes. The Supreme Court has been consistent: you cannot impose a financial cost on the exercise of a fundamental right.
If documentation is required to vote, and obtaining that documentation costs money, you have effectively reinstated a poll tax by another name. That’s not a liberal talking point. That’s constitutional law. Any serious voter verification system must include a free path to compliance — free document assistance, free photo ID, funded outreach. The SAVE Act contains none of that.
What Would Actually Work
I’m not writing this to protect the status quo. I’m writing this because I believe in doing things right, and this isn’t it.
Here’s what a serious approach looks like:
First, secure the documents. Restrict certified copies of birth certificates to verified requestors before building a voter verification system on top of them. You can’t require a document as proof of identity while letting anyone obtain it for $15 with no questions asked.
Second, once that foundation is in place, require documentation for all new voter registrations. Prospective, not retroactive. New standard, clean implementation.
Third, give existing voters a full election cycle minimum to come into compliance — with federally funded assistance, free document help, and free photo ID for anyone who needs it. No exceptions on the free path. A right you have to pay to exercise isn’t a right.
That’s a system that takes the goal seriously. What we have instead is a system that creates the appearance of security while leaving the actual vulnerabilities intact — and placing the burden squarely on the 21 million honest citizens who just don’t happen to have the right paperwork. When you look at who those people are — elderly, low income, minorities, the naturalized — and you consider that the fraud being prevented is essentially theoretical, it’s fair to ask what this law is actually designed to do.
I’ll let you draw your own conclusion on that.
The Standard You Set
I believe in freedom. I believe in constitutional rights. And I believe that a principle worth holding is worth applying consistently — regardless of which right is being discussed.
The argument that you cannot stop bad actors by burdening good ones is a good argument. The argument that security must precede enforcement is a good argument. They deserve to be applied here with the same conviction they’ve been applied everywhere else.
The SAVE America Act, as written, fails both tests — by the standards its own supporters have spent decades establishing.
If election integrity is the real goal — and I think for many people it genuinely is — then let’s do the work to actually achieve it. Secure the foundation. Fund the path to compliance. Then set the standard.
Anything less isn’t security. It’s theater.
Have thoughts on this? I’d genuinely like to hear them — especially if you disagree. What am I missing?
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