Trump presses GOP to tie voting bill to Pentagon funds

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1–2 minutes

Summary

Trump urged Republicans to link voting legislation to Pentagon funding before Congress leaves for its summer recess.

Why this matters

The push could shape whether Republicans can advance voting legislation in the Senate by tying it to must-pass budget measures. It also raises the stakes for Congress ahead of a tight legislative calendar before the end-of-July recess.

President Donald Trump called on Republicans to combine voting legislation with a defense spending bill, seeking to pass both before Congress begins an extended summer recess.

The House has repeatedly passed versions of the elections measure, known as the SAVE America Act, but it does not have enough support to overcome the Senate’s 60-vote filibuster threshold.

Trump said he wanted congressional leaders to attach the voting measure to his administration’s request for $350 billion in additional Pentagon funding as part of a broader package of Republican priorities.

“I am calling on House and Senate Leadership to make this their Number One Priority, and ensure that 350 Billion Dollars in Recon 3.0 moves out of the Budget Committee as soon as Congress is back in session,” Trump wrote on social media. “The SAVE AMERICA ACT, which everyone is asking for, paired with the full funding of our Great Department of War, can be passed very quickly, ensuring that the United States of America stays FREE for Generations to come.”

Trump’s statement followed House Speaker Mike Johnson’s announcement that he would make another attempt to pass voting restrictions when lawmakers return from the July 4 break. Johnson said he would use the defense spending bill Republicans are advancing through budget reconciliation as the vehicle.

The bill would require proof of citizenship to register and a photo ID to vote. Johnson has said he would try to pass it through the budget process, which requires only a simple majority in the Senate.

The plan did not immediately satisfy hard-line conservatives, who halted House business last week. Johnson canceled votes and sent lawmakers home early before the holiday. House members are due back in Washington next week.

Any combined measure would still need Senate approval and could face resistance from moderates and fiscal hawks. Trump in June declined to sign a bipartisan housing bill passed by both chambers amid the dispute over voting legislation.

Congress also has limited time. Lawmakers in both chambers are scheduled to leave for a weekslong summer recess at the end of July.

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