Conservatives shoot down Senate off-ramp on SAVE America Act
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Conservative lawmakers rejected a budget reconciliation strategy to pass the SAVE America Act, blocking a procedural workaround Trump had sought for voting eligibility rules.
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Conservative lawmakers in both the Senate and House are rejecting a budget reconciliation strategy that Republican leadership had considered as a potential pathway to pass key provisions of the SAVE America Act, which concerns voter eligibility requirements. The maneuver had been floated partly to relieve pressure from President Trump, who has pushed the legislation as a priority. Conservatives argue the reconciliation route lacks the votes to succeed and prefer pursuing the bill through standard legislative channels instead. This fracture within the GOP creates a significant hurdle for advancing Trump's voting eligibility agenda, as reconciliation had been seen as a possible workaround to bypass the 60-vote Senate threshold. The rejection signals that conservative hardliners will not accept compromise procedural solutions on an issue they view as central to election integrity.
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