The president has made his priorities crystal clear. The question, as always, is whether the Republican Congress will actually listen.
Trump posted his demands over the holiday weekend with the kind of specificity that leaves no room for misinterpretation: Reconciliation 3.0, $350 billion for national defense, and the SAVE America Act. Not suggestions. Not negotiating positions. Demands. From the President of the United States to a Republican-controlled Congress that has spent months finding creative new ways to fumble a historic mandate.
The defense funding number alone should end any debate. The Pentagon didn’t dream up $350 billion arbitrarily — this is what military leaders say they need to fund the Golden Dome missile defense system, modernize the armed forces, restore the warrior ethos that the Biden administration spent four years systematically dismantling, and ensure that America’s military dominance isn’t just rhetoric. As Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell put it plainly: “The fate of our future military dominance hangs in the balance.” That’s not a press release. That’s a warning.
And then there’s the SAVE America Act — the proof-of-citizenship, photo-ID voting requirement that the overwhelming majority of Americans support and that Democrats have fought tooth and nail to prevent because they know exactly what honest elections do to their coalition. Trump wants it attached to reconciliation. Senate Parliamentarian rules make that complicated. Trump’s answer to that complication has been equally clear: fire the parliamentarian and get it done.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) isn’t going to fire the parliamentarian. Everyone knows this. So Republicans are floating an alternative — a $4 billion grant program to incentivize states to implement voter ID and citizenship verification voluntarily. It is, to put it charitably, not the same thing as a federal mandate. It is the kind of half-measure that lets Republicans tell their voters they did something while ensuring that California, New York, and Illinois do absolutely nothing.
Trump wants $350 billion for the Pentagon in reconciliation 3.0. Not $67 billion. Plus SAVE America Act.
SAVE cannot go in reconciliation. House Republican leaders have been focused on a $4B fund to incentivize states to conduct voter ID/citizenship checks. That's clearly not… https://t.co/EUQaWzs6Ou
— Jake Sherman (@JakeSherman) July 7, 2026
Here is the cold reality Congress is walking back into after its recess: Democrats have already published their plan to kill the filibuster, pack the Supreme Court, and federalize elections in their favor the moment they take back power. They are not bluffing. They are not posturing. They put their names on a resolution. And the only thing standing between that plan and execution is a Republican majority that keeps finding reasons to do less than the moment demands.
Trump is asking for $350 billion to defend the country and a law to ensure that only American citizens decide its elections. These are not radical requests. They are the baseline obligations of a government that takes its own survival seriously.
Congress comes back next week. The clock is running. The president has told them exactly what he needs.
Now deliver it — or explain to the voters why you didn’t.


