RNC Sues Colorado’s TDS-Afflicted Elections Chief For Violating State Constitution
Secretary of State Jena Griswold's UOCAVA guidance permitting 'never residents' of Colorado is in conflict with residency law.

Over the past several months, President Donald Trump has declared the passage of his voter ID law — called the SAVE American Act — his top legislative priority, saying that he will not sign any other bills until it is passed. Critics have argued that the bill will disenfranchise millions of voters, and that it’s part of Trump’s effort to manipulate the midterm elections in which Republicans are projected to take major losses. But as one top GOP insider has noted, Trump’s bill very well could “hurt” his party in the end. “There's so much dumb about this fight, but the fact that the SAVE Act might well hurt the GOP electorally is the chef's kiss,” posted former Republican congressional staffer and DOJ lawyer Gregg Nunziata, who is currently the Executive Director at the Society for the Rule of Law. He made this assertion along with a retweeted screenshot from a Washington Post op-ed published on Monday, in which University of Notre Dame law professor Derek T. Muller argues some of the more practical limitations to Trump’s SAVE Act. Among these, as Nunziata notes, is the fact that a law requiring voter ID could backfire for Republicans. As Muller writes, “The bill’s design prefers IDs that Democrats tend to have more than Republicans do. It privileges passports, which Democrats own at higher rates than Republicans, and removes concealed carry licenses as permissible ID in several states. The bill also adds paperwork for married women who change their names, who are disproportionately Republicans. And it ends online voter registration for rural — mostly Republican — voters. If Republicans are hoping to gain an electoral edge with this bill, they are sorely mistaken.”In other words, while the SAVE America Act is Trump’s effort to trim off pesky Democratic voters, it could have the exact opposite effect. The president and his MAGA loyalists are the only ones who don’t seem to realize this, as other Republican lawmakers have made it clear that they would rather SAVE disappear from the discourse. As Muller’s op-ed elaborated, Republican state lawmakers in places like Texas and Florida are “hardly indifferent to election security, but the bill would tell them their ID laws are inadequate — not because they failed to verify voters, but because they used a different list of IDs.” Texas, for example, has its own voter ID laws that allow the use of recently expired driver's licenses, while Florida allows concealed carry licenses. And not only would the creation of a standardized ID system across the country be a complicated, disruptive process, but with a consequential midterm election looming, attempting to implement such a complex endeavor could result in massive electoral chaos.“Election law works best when rules are clear before voting begins,” says Muller. “If the bill passes in its present form, voters from Texas to Florida will be surprised this November that long-standing IDs are no longer acceptable. Lawmakers have not thought through the details of this bill. If Congress wishes to secure elections, it should set reasonable guardrails and allow the states to fill in the gaps.”
Secretary of State Jena Griswold's UOCAVA guidance permitting 'never residents' of Colorado is in conflict with residency law.
The Supreme Court delivered a consequential setback for the commander-in-chief and executive power.
President Trump on Monday slammed the Supreme Court ruling allowing states to count mail-in ballots received after Election Day, arguing it is now even more important for Congress to pass the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE America) Act. The Supreme Court upheld a Mississippi law that allows mail-in ballots sent by Election Day to be…
Gov. Gavin Newsom (D-CA) is deepening the state’s embrace of artificial intelligence by signing a deal with San Francisco-based Anthropic that will make Claude the first generative AI platform available across state agencies and local governments. The deal comes at a politically charged moment. While the Trump administration has moved to restrict the rollout of […]
President Donald Trump embraced the Supreme Court‘s decision in Trump v. Slaughter that expands his executive power to fire members of some independent federal bodies. “BIG WIN just moments ago at the Supreme Court, in the Slaughter Case, confirming Presidential Power in our Country to remove Executive Branch Officers and Agency Appointees, or Representatives, under […]
President Donald Trump reacted to a major Supreme Court loss Monday by pressuring five Republican senators to flip their positions and vote to pass the SAVE America Act. On Monday, the Supreme Court ruled against the Trump administration and upheld a Mississippi law allowing mail-in ballots to be counted if they’re postmarked by Election Day […]
President Donald Trump pledged to “continue the fight” in his appeal of a New York jury’s unanimous ruling that he defamed and sexually assaulted writer E. Jean Carroll and owes her $5 million in damages, despite the Supreme Court’s decision not to hear the case. Trump previously asked the Supreme Court to overturn the case, […]
The president promised to “take appropriate action immediately” against Lisa D. Cook, a Fed governor.