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The SAVE Act's Impact on Women Voters Isn't a Coincidence. It's Voter Suppression.
The SAVE Acts Impact on Women Voters Isnt a Coincidence. Its Voter Suppression.
PUBLISHED 3/26/2025 by Beth Lynk
A dangerous attack on voting rights comes amidst critical local elections in 2025.

People participate in a protest against the Trump administrations mass firing of government workers and civil servants in front of the Capitol building on Presidents Day, Feb. 17, 2025. (Dominic Gwinn / Middle East Images via AFP and Getty Images)
Shirley Chisholm said, If they dont give you a seat at the table, bring a folding chair. I carry these words with me every day, along with the awareness that if they try to take your seat, it means that they are intimidated by your power. And its our responsibility to fight to keep itlike my grandmother, Doris Sheafe, who, at age 23 in 1937 (before all Black women had the right to vote) made her voice heard and testified before Congress about the American Youth Act. Now, in 2025, we are spending Womens History Month not only celebrating our power but also fighting for it as we honor the women who paved the way. Womenespecially Black womenare still fighting for equal rights and opportunities in the U.S. Meanwhile, members of Congress are threatening to undermine the hard-fought, fundamental right to vote for all Americans, including millions of women, under the guise of misleading allegations of voter fraud. And theyre ironically calling it the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act.
Make no mistake: The SAVE Act is not going to save anything. This legislation would create unnecessary barriers to registering to vote in every state. It would require all voters to provide proof of citizenship documents in person when registering to vote or updating their registrationprovisions that effectively end online, automatic and mail-in voter registration. Women who change their name after marriage or divorce would face unnecessary barriers to registering to vote.
Hoping your birth certificate will be sufficient proof of citizenship? Think again, because as many as 69 million married women do not have a birth certificate matching their legal name, and as many as 3.3 million eligible trans voters face the same barrier. How about your passport? The reality is that more than 140 million American citizens, including 56 percent of Black Americans, do not have a passport, a document that also requires a legal name.

House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) speaks to the media after a vote on the government funding bill at the Capitol on Sept. 18, 2024. Johnson was determined to include the SAVE Act in the budget bill, but after the bill failed to pass, he removed it. It was initially passed by the House in July 2024 as a standalone bill with a recorded vote of 221-198, but was never taken up by the Senate. (Tasos Katopodis / Getty Images)
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Additionally, in a post-Roe reality where the courts have more say on womens reproductive healthcare than ever before, more than 1,000 judges are on ballots across the country this year, including critical state supreme court races in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. Womens rights are always on the ballot, and the SAVE Act is a targeted effort to silence voters with the potential to impact millions of women. Right now is the time to call our U.S. senators and tell them to vote no on this dangerous bill. With so much at stake, it is more important than ever for us to check and update our voter registration to make sure we stand ready to decide the future of our communities and protect our democracy in 2025.
https://msmagazine.com/2025/03/26/save-act-voting-rights-women-trans-voters-elections/