Politics
NEW: GOP Senator Exposed For Secretly Trying To Stop The SAVE America Act
Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) is firing back after reports that a fellow Republican privately tried to derail his push for the SAVE America Act, exposing what appears to be growing internal GOP tension over one of the party’s biggest election priorities.
According to a new Punchbowl News report, at least one Republican senator anonymously complained that Lee should stop aggressively pushing the legislation, which would require proof of citizenship and photo identification for participation in federal elections. The outlet described the bill as a “touchy subject” inside the Senate Republican conference.
Lee did not take the criticism quietly.
“Supposedly, one of my colleagues called the effort to pass the SAVE America Act in the Senate a charade,” Lee said in a fiery response on social media.
“Well, my guess is that whoever said that but didn’t have the guts to put their name to it is somebody who’s a co-sponsor of the SAVE America Act, who openly, actively tells his constituents that he’s a co-sponsor of the SAVE America Act, and maybe even tells donors that in order to raise funds!”
“Regardless, this isn’t going away. I’m not going away. This thing’s not a charade. And I’m doubling down on this,” Lee continued. “I’m going to work twice as hard just because you said that, whoever you are!”
WATCH:
The clash offers a rare public glimpse into divisions inside the Republican Party over how hard to push election legislation that energizes the conservative base but faces steep odds in the Senate.
Punchbowl reported that Senate leadership previously allowed extended floor debate on the issue in part to ease pressure from conservatives and demonstrate the difficulty of passing it under current Senate rules.
Tensions inside the Republican conference spilled into public view after one GOP senator blasted the SAVE Act push and took aim at Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX).
“John is playing footsie with MAGA on the SAVE Act. Nothing he does will ever satisfy them,” said a GOP senator who was granted anonymity to deliver a candid assessment. “Why are we carrying on with this charade?”
According to the report, several Republican senators have grown frustrated with outside pressure campaigns like the ones Lee has been promoting on social media. Multiple GOP lawmakers also said Lee seldom, if ever, makes his case during closed-door conference meetings, where senators typically work to win over colleagues privately.
Republicans pushed Tax Day messaging around tax cuts and Trump’s “no tax on tips,” but it was overshadowed by Iran turmoil. Some GOP senators want to expand the reconciliation bill to add campaign-friendly issues, though Thune opposes complicating it beyond immigration funding.
The anonymous swipe appears to be what triggered Lee’s public counterattack. Some lawmakers want to keep hammering election integrity issues ahead of the midterms, while others would rather focus on immigration, taxes, inflation and national security.
For Lee, however, the issue is clearly personal and political.
The Utah senator has become one of the loudest champions of the bill, using social media and public appearances to pressure colleagues and rally grassroots conservatives. His latest comments suggest that any effort to silence him may only intensify the campaign.
Rather than retreating, Lee is using the anonymous criticism as fuel. The anonymous senator may have hoped to slow Lee down behind closed doors. Instead, the criticism appears to have done the opposite.

