Saturday, April 11, 2026

How Trump’s SAVE America Act could make it harder for married women to vote


By Jonathan Shorman

Millions of women could face new challenges to voting under President Donald Trump’s SAVE America Act, which would require voters to prove their citizenship before casting a ballot.

The federal legislation would mandate that most Americans show a birth certificate or passport to register to vote. But people with names that don’t match their birth certificate in some instances could have to produce additional documents like a marriage certificate or divorce decree linking their past and current identities.








The proposal holds potentially outsized consequences for millions of married and divorced women, transgender individuals and others who have changed their names.

As many as 69 million American women have birth certificates that don’t match their current name, according to an analysis by the liberal Center for American Progress.

“The fact that the majority of women upon marriage do change their name already means that this is going to be completely unequal in how the law is applied,” said Letitia Harmon, senior director of policy and research at Florida Rising, a racial and economic justice nonprofit.

Harmon, 43, has personal experience with the issue because of state proof-of-citizenship laws, which have become more common in recent years.

The Florida resident used to live in Kansas, which required individuals to show documents like a birth certificate or passport to register to vote until federal courts struck down the law as unconstitutional. Ahead of the 2014 election, Harmon was unable to locate her birth certificate before the registration deadline and couldn’t vote.

More recently, Florida, Mississippi, South Dakota and Utah have all enacted proof-of-citizenship measures this year, in addition to Wyoming in 2025. Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis signed the Florida SAVE Act last week.

A dozen years later, Harmon worries she could again face additional hurdles to voting — this time because of multiple name changes. Harmon, who changed her name when she married but later divorced and changed it back, voiced concern that if election officials ever check her registration, it will be flagged.

“It’s heartbreaking and it’s infuriating. It feels like we’re going backwards,” Harmon said.

Debate in D.C.

In Washington, the U.S. Senate has been debating the SAVE America Act, Trump’s signature elections initiative, after a version of the legislation passed the House. The bill doesn’t appear to have enough support to survive a filibuster, but Trump and his allies have pressured senators to end the filibuster to pass it before the midterm elections.

Supporters of the bill describe it as an election integrity measure and say it’s necessary to prevent noncitizen voting, though studies have shown that’s extremely rare. The measure reflects a long-running effort by Trump to assert more federal control over elections that includes a campaign by the Department of Justice to obtain sensitive state voter data and an executive order signed last week restricting mail-in voting.








Opponents condemn the legislation as unneeded and poorly drafted. If enacted, the bill would take immediate effect, throwing the election process into chaos in a midterm election year as millions of people registering to vote attempt to prove their citizenship. The new requirements would risk disenfranchising American voters struggling to obtain the documents they need in time.

Disproportionate effect on married women

Critics have especially focused on the disproportionate effect the legislation could have on women. Eighty-four percent of women in opposite-sex marriages take either their husband’s last name or hyphenate their name, according to a 2023 Pew Research Center survey. By contrast, less than 6% of men took their wife’s last name or hyphenated their name.

“Given that 85% of American women change their name when they get married, the impact on women is going to be huge and it’s going to be very problematic,” Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows, a Democrat, said in a February interview.

The House-passed version of the bill says that when individuals applying to register have names that don’t match the name on their proof-of-citizenship documents, they could provide “additional documentation as necessary to establish that the name on the documentation is a previous name of the applicant” or sign an affidavit affirming that the name on the documents is their previous name.

According to the bill, each state would establish a process to carry out this provision, in line with guidance from the federal Election Assistance Commission, a bipartisan independent commission that aids election officials.

Affidavit provision unclear

Some election and legal experts have said the affidavit provision is unclear. It comes immediately before another provision that allows individuals without proof-of-citizenship documentation to register if they sign an attestation that they are a citizen and an election official signs an affidavit saying the person has sufficiently established citizenship. The Election Assistance Commission would create a uniform affidavit for use in that situation.

“Who knows what sort of process they’ll say,” said Alison Gill, director of nominations and democracy at the National Women’s Law Center, a progressive legal advocacy group. “So there is language there, but it’s still very vague and conflictual.”

Because states would be responsible for setting procedures to vet those with different names on their documents, Gill said some states would probably try to make the process easier than others. But election officials would likely err on the side of strict enforcement because they could be prosecuted for registering individuals who don’t provide citizenship documents.

“Ultimately, this puts the burden on election officials, who face criminal and civil liability under the bill, potentially to decide whether to risk registering a person with mismatching documents,” Gill said.

‘Frankly insulting’

White House officials and some congressional Republicans have denied that individuals who change their name would face greater difficulty registering to vote. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in March that there was “zero validity” to claims that the legislation would stop women from voting or make it harder for them to vote.

Married women who have changed their name and are already registered to vote would be unaffected by the legislation, Leavitt said. She added that for the “small fraction” of individuals who go on to change their name or their address, they would have to go through their state’s process to update their documentation.








“I think it’s frankly insulting that the Democrats are saying that there are certain groups of people in this country who aren’t smart enough to update their documentation to allow them to vote,” Leavitt said.

But Alaska Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski has raised concerns about how the SAVE America Act would affect married women. Murkowski, who opposes the bill, said in a floor speech that an estimated 155,000 female citizens in Alaska age 15 and older have names that don’t match their birth certificates.

“Again, is it impossible? No,” Murkowski said. “Is it going to be really challenging? Absolutely, yes.”Lawsuits ensured

The SAVE America Act would almost certainly face legal challenges if it became law and the Supreme Court would come under immense pressure to weigh in because of the sweeping, nationwide changes in the legislation.

Some federal courts have ruled against proof-of-citizenship voter registration requirements. In 2020, the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals struck down Kansas’ law, finding that it violated federal voting laws as well as the Constitution’s equal protection clause. The Supreme Court at the time declined to take the Kansas case.







The provisions on name changes alone could face their own legal challenges.

Tracy Thomas, a constitutional law professor at the University of Akron School of Law in Ohio, said opponents could argue the bill’s impact on people who change their name amounts to voting discrimination in violation of the 14th Amendment, which guarantees equal protection under the law.

Courts have affirmed some election restrictions, like requirements to show a photo ID at the polls, as acceptable rules that don’t overly burden voters. However, Thomas suggested the SAVE America Act may go too far if it delays people from registering, requires multiple steps and forces them to pay for needed documents.

“That starts to sound like more than minimal inconvenience,” Thomas said.

20 comments:

  1. Anonymous5:34 PM

    Yawn

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    1. DDDD and proud of it!6:21 PM

      534, When mommy wakes you up in the morning and changes your loaded diaper, you'll notice "save america" is just another, in a long line of preposterous power grabbing attempts to subvert the election, and white wash the country. Sending people of color to another country and keeping women in the kitchen is the deplorable grandiose theme of "make america great again". Our "taco" leadership is grounded in ignorance along with the most lame and sexually deviant pedophiles. Even the "(f)Worst lady is squeeling like a pig to save her bacon. Save America? Not with this band of pathetic and cowardly degenerates.

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    2. Anonymous10:24 PM

      5:34 let me guess, you are a male maga, you obviously think this does not affect you. It affects every American of voting age. Wake up!!

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  2. Anonymous4:36 AM

    It a woman bashing as usual that goes with this administration, we are supposed to submit, cook ,clean , have babies, and keep our mouth shut. Maybe its time for the men in family to take wifes maiden name, see how it feels for awhile.

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  3. Anonymous5:08 AM

    It has always been this way,if your name changed.Man or woman. Nothing new.

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  4. Anonymous5:10 AM

    Been this way for years.Man or woman .Proof of identity.It’s the law!!!!!

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    1. Anonymous8:27 PM

      5:08 and 5:10 how this worked in the past when a name change happened due to marriage or divorce, you took your paperwork to the social security office and provided proof of the name change. Then you went to the driver’s bureau with the social security paperwork, birth certificate and marriage or divorce papers and did your name change. Your voter information was also updated at the same time. When very first obtaining your original drivers license, usually at age 16, you were required to bring your certified birth certificate which proved you were a citizen of the United States. When you renewed your drivers license at age 18, you was then allowed to register to vote after again providing that you were still a citizen of the United States. Now, from all the information I have read is we may have to update all this information again just to be able to vote if this act is passed. Unless you still have the same name as listed on your birth certificate, which is generally men only, except for single women. Or you have a valid passport with your current name on it. That means taking your certified birth certificate, all marriage licenses and divorce degrees, in to update our voting registration. Can you imagine the lines that you will have to stand in, work missed just to jump through hoops, when we have already provided proof that we are a citizen of our country every time we have renewed or changed our name on our drivers license. Not to mention anyone that has lost their paperwork due to fires, floods or even moves. Every item required for this act will cost additional time and money to anyone who has to jump through these hoops. In Missouri we already have to show our drivers license when we vote even though we are mailed a voter id card, which does not allow us to vote using it without our drivers license. Why are we even paying for the printing or mailing of these voter registration cards when they do nothing. Trump shut down his partisan committee, that he formed to find people fraudulently voting because they only found a few republicans who had voted twice or voted using their spouses ballot. I never once heard of voting fraud being rampant until Trump came on the scene. If voting fraud lost him the 2020 election, then how did so many republicans win as congress representatives, senators or governors? Are you telling me that people only fraudulently voted for Biden? What a joke of an act to be wasting our tax money, our own money and time on.

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  5. Anonymous12:36 PM

    BS. Fake outrage. I’ve been married 3 times and never kept my maiden name. Guess what? I had zero problems getting my Real ID and passport. So stop the whining’

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    1. Anonymous3:11 PM

      Wow, what's really the bigger issue here? Getting your ID or failing at 3 marriages. Sounds like you had no problems probably because you REALLY did want to change your name asap?

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    2. Anonymous4:49 PM

      3:11 I agree. When did multiple failed marriages become something to brag about? Or is this the new maga culture?

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    3. Anonymous8:32 PM

      12:36 your real ID does not work for you to vote if this voters act is passed. Only your passport will work. Not everyone has a passport, nor the money to obtain one. In addition, the time to obtain your passport is not a short time unless you are willing to pay additional money to get one expedited. If you suddenly have a lot of women trying to obtain a passport so they may be able to vote, the wait time will grow exponentially.

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  6. Anonymous4:29 PM

    Awe 3:11 Some women are smart enough to Leave a marriage when a husband changes and becomes abusive, zero shame in that!

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  7. Anonymous6:09 PM

    I think women are smart enough to know how to register to vote, if ANYONE wants to vote they have plenty of time to do it. When I became voting age I gathered up the paper work I needed took it to the office and registered,it took about 10-15 minutes and I was done. People, if you want to vote you have a year and a half to get registered, do it, don't do nothing but complain about how mistreated you are because you don't want to obey the law.

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    1. Anonymous1:45 PM

      6:09 exactly when do you think the next election is? Where do you come up with people having a year and a half to accomplish updating their voting registration? The next election is November 2026. This is now April 2026, which is now less than 8 months from now. Yes, women are quite capable of getting things done, but if this act gets passed, the time to accomplish it is quite short. Wake up and see what is happening around you.

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  8. Anonymous7:59 PM

    4:29 where does 3:11
    Say she left because of abuse? Maybe she was cheating or the abuser?

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  9. Siggy Freud8:13 AM

    Check out the blasphemous abomination the orange fuhrer released on truth social last night. Trump depicting himself as Christ should make all you conservative magats take issue and question your fealty to your Faux king......unless some of you fruitcakes actually believe he's the king. In that case, you need professional help.

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  10. Anonymous8:13 AM

    7:59 Maybe it’s the same person. And just Maybe not everyone shares the abuse they once had to endure before they got up the courage to leave. Quit complaining and support elections that allow only US citizens to vote. It’s not a hardship, it’s simple. And you make yourselves sound like you’re uneducated and can’t figure out how to vote. And if you are that stupid Then don’t vote.

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    1. Anonymous1:40 PM

      8:13 your reading comprehension of a previous comment is quite amazing. You definitely have a great ability to ass u me a lot about nothing that was mentioned.

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    2. Anonymous4:46 PM

      8:13 I haven’t seen any comments of people complaining about her being abused and divorcing due to abuse. If abuse is the reason behind her 3 divorces, I would hope that she is now able to spot the warning signs before a fourth marriage and realize that she may be best off remaining single.

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    3. Anonymous4:53 PM

      8:13 it is and has already been a federal law that only citizens of the United States are allowed to vote. This is just more nonsense by this administration to create difficulties and division when it comes to voting. Why would any illegal immigrate want to bring attention to themselves, while trying to illegally vote??? Common sense says they wouldn’t.

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