Thune says Senate to consider voting bill but pushes back on demands for
'talking filibuster'
[March 11, 2026]
By MARY CLARE JALONICK
WASHINGTON (AP) — Majority Leader John Thune said Tuesday that the
Senate will consider a bill to impose strict new proof-of-citizenship
requirements in elections, but says “the votes aren’t there” to pass it
through a marathon talking filibuster sought by President Donald Trump.
Trump has said he won’t sign any other legislation until the bill —
known as the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility or SAVE America Act —
is passed. But it faces unified opposition from Democrats, meaning that
the Senate can’t pass it unless Republicans change the rules and
eliminate the filibuster.
Thune has said there aren’t enough votes to do that, or to launch a
talking filibuster that would force Democrats to hold the floor
indefinitely to block the bill.
“That is just a function of math,” Thune told reporters on Tuesday,
making his strongest statements yet after weeks of discussions among GOP
senators. “For better or worse, I’m the one who has to be a clear-eyed
realist about what we can achieve here.”
Republican senators are discussing, instead, voting on the legislation
as soon as next week under regular procedure — meaning it will likely
fail. Thune said that Republicans are “going to have a fight on the
floor” and will force Democrats to vote on “whether they think
noncitizens should vote in American elections.”
Trump’s aggressive effort to dictate Senate procedure has put Thune in
an awkward position as he has tried to appease the president and
increasingly angry base voters who have called for Republicans to do
whatever they can to pass it ahead of the midterm elections. But most
Republican senators appear to be backing Thune’s approach.
“There’s been enough dithering,” said Sen. John Kennedy, R-La.. “It’s
time to go and let the chips fall where they may.”

Trump's talking filibuster
Trump has made the SAVE America Act a priority ahead of the midterm
elections, arguing that Republicans need it to win — even as his party
won the presidency and congressional majorities in 2024 without it.
Federal law already requires that voters in national elections be U.S.
citizens.
“It’ll guarantee the midterms,” he told House Republicans Monday at
their annual retreat at his Florida golf club. “If you don’t get it, big
trouble.”
But Trump's push is running into the realities of the Senate, where
minority Democrats can filibuster any piece of legislation and force
Republicans to find 60 votes when they only hold 53 seats. Democrats
uniformly oppose the legislation, arguing that it would disenfranchise
some 20 million American voters who don’t have birth certificates or
other documents readily available.
Republicans could change the rules and eliminate the filibuster to pass
it, or they could attempt the talking filibuster. But Thune says they
don’t have enough support within the GOP conference to do either.
Even if they did, a talking filibuster would not guarantee passage.
Supporters of that approach say that Democrats would eventually tire of
speaking or allow the legislation to pass. But Democrats would also be
allowed to bring up an indefinite number of amendments on any subject,
forcing Republicans to take hard votes in an election year and delaying
the process even more.
“We can’t find a piece of legislation in history that’s been passed that
way,” Thune said this week.
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Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., speaks to reporters after
a weekly Republican luncheon, at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday,
March 10, 2026. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)

Republicans ready to move
Utah Sen. Mike Lee, who has led the talking filibuster push with
Trump, posted on X Tuesday that the “Senate should do everything it
can in an effort to pass” the bill.
“While passage isn’t guaranteed, we can be certain that failure will
be the outcome if we don’t try," Lee wrote.
But leaving a GOP conference meeting on Tuesday, several senators
said it was time to move on the legislation, even if they couldn’t
accommodate the president’s procedural demands.
“I think we just go ahead and try to get on the bill,” said Sen.
Roger Marshall, R-Kansas.
Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson suggested that they should debate the
bill on the floor for an extended time. There should not be a “one
and done vote,” he said.
“Our base would scream about that and that wouldn’t be smart,”
Johnson said.
There was little anger at Thune, as many of his GOP colleagues agree
that eliminating the filibuster would be unwise and the talking
filibuster would be risky. Republicans have long pushed back on
efforts to “nuke” the filibuster, arguing that minority rights need
to be preserved for legislation.
“There’s a right way to do it, there’s a wrong way to do it,” said
Republican Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina. “Nuking the
filibuster doesn’t work. The talking filibuster would be a goat
rodeo.”
Tillis said Thune “has the toughest job in Washington, D.C. He’s
doing just fine. And he, quite honestly, has taken on a lot for the
members.”
New priorities
Trump said over the weekend that he also wants to add new priorities
to the legislation, including a ban on mail-in ballots that he has
pushed since losing the 2020 presidential election. He said he also
wants to add on two unrelated provisions around transgender rights
issues — one that would ban those born as men from playing in
women’s sports and another to block sex reassignment surgeries on
some minors.
“Let’s go for the gold,” Trump told the House Republicans.
House Speaker Mike Johnson said Tuesday at the Florida retreat that
they are “looking at mechanisms” to do that, even though the House
has already passed the bill and sent it to the Senate. But it’s
unclear if a ban on mail-in ballots would pass the House, as they
are popular in many states.

Thune said that the House would probably have to pass a new bill to
add those issues.
“It would probably make sense for them to send over another
version,” he said.
___
Associated Press writers Kevin Freking and Lisa Mascaro in
Washington and Steven Sloan in Doral, Florida contributed to this
report.
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