The third reconciliation bill of the Trump era officially kicked off Wednesday morning, and Republicans are finally putting their two most important priorities in the same vehicle: election integrity and national defense. The House Budget Committee votes Thursday. The goal is passage before the August recess. And if it works, the SAVE America Act — proof of citizenship to register, photo ID to vote — becomes federal law without needing a single Democratic vote or surviving a Senate filibuster.
This is the path. It has always been the path. Republicans just needed to commit to walking it.
Speaker Johnson’s statement didn’t leave any ambiguity about what this is and why it matters: “While House Republicans have unanimously passed the SAVE Act three times, Congressional Democrats continue obstructing our attempts to secure our elections and fund our men and women in uniform. Not any longer.”
Three times. Unanimously. Obstructed every time by a Democratic minority using Senate procedural rules to block legislation supported by roughly 80% of the American public. The reconciliation vehicle sidesteps that obstruction entirely — requiring only 51 Senate votes instead of 60. It is the only realistic path to getting this done before the 2026 midterms. Republicans are finally using it.
The legislative design is deliberately narrow — what aides called a “streamlined product” built specifically to survive the Senate’s Byrd Rule, which limits what can be included in reconciliation bills to provisions with direct budgetary impact. Every provision will be structured to maintain what insiders call “privilege” in the Senate — meaning it can’t be challenged and stripped out on procedural grounds. Getting that architecture right is critical, and House leadership has been working with the White House closely to nail it.
The defense funding component is equally serious. With Iran’s war resuming, three consecutive nights of American strikes against Iranian targets, and $350 billion in requested military funding still pending, the reconciliation bill gives Republicans a vehicle to deliver the Pentagon resources the moment demands — without having to negotiate with Democrats who have spent months obstructing every defense priority on the table.
There’s one significant complication the bill has to navigate. Lindsey Graham, who chaired the Senate Budget Committee and was one of the SAVE America Act’s most committed champions, died Saturday. His death leaves the committee without its chairman at the exact moment this bill needs to move through it. Senator Ron Johnson is expected to step into that role and is supportive of the reconciliation effort — but the transition creates friction in an already compressed timeline.
Graham’s last phone call was about the SAVE America Act. His last act in the Senate, in whatever form his legacy takes, should be that it passed.
The House Budget Committee votes Thursday. The clock is running. Democrats are watching — and they know exactly what this bill does to their plans for 2026 and beyond.
Pass it. Now. Before the window closes.


