About this episode
Save America Act Reaches the Senate Floor: Inside the High‑Stakes Fight for Election Integrity The latest episode of Verdict with Ted Cruz, hosted by Senator Ted Cruz and Ben Ferguson, marks a pivotal moment in the ongoing national debate over election integrity. After months of procedural battles, the Save America Act has officially reached the floor of the United States Senate—a development that Senator Cruz describes as both long overdue and absolutely essential to the preservation of American democracy. This episode offers an in‑depth breakdown of what the Save America Act does, why Democrats are uniformly opposing it, and what comes next as Republicans attempt to navigate Senate rules, internal divisions, and the ever‑present threat of a failed vote. At its core, the discussion centers on a fundamental question: Does voting matter enough to protect it? What the Save America Act Does—and Why It Matters As Senator Cruz explains, the Save America Act is simple, narrow, and commonsense legislation. It contains two core requirements for federal elections: Proof of United States citizenship when registering to vote Photo identification in order to cast a ballot That is the entirety of the bill. There are no complex carve‑outs, no sweeping federal overhauls, and no hidden provisions. According to Senator Cruz, the legislation is designed to ensure that only American citizens vote in American elections, thereby safeguarding both the mechanical integrity of elections and public confidence in their outcomes. The Senator emphasizes that legitimacy in a democracy rests on two pillars: a system that produces accurate results and a public that trusts those results. If either pillar collapses, the entire democratic structure is weakened. The Save America Act, he argues, reinforces both. The Senate Vote That Brought the Bill Forward The episode opens with the announcement that the Save America Act has cleared a crucial procedural hurdle. The Senate voted 51–47 to bring the bill to the floor for debate. Every Republican senator supported moving the bill forward except for one, with one additional Republican not voting. No Democrats supported the motion. This vote does not mean passage is guaranteed. Under Senate rules, final passage will require 60 votes, unless Republicans can force a so‑called talking filibuster—a strategy Senator Cruz strongly advocates and explains in detail later in the episode. A Constitutional and Historica