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Unidentified speaker urges House Administration committee to pass Save America Act, cites poll support for photo ID
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Summary
An unidentified speaker urged members of the House Administration committee to approve the Save America Act, saying the bill would restrict voting to U.S. citizens and citing poll figures — 83% of adults and 73% of Democratic voters — in support of photo ID requirements; no opposing remarks appear in the transcript.
An unidentified speaker asked members of the House Administration committee to support the Save America Act, saying the measure "ensures that only American citizens vote in American elections" and urging colleagues to vote yes.
The speaker framed the bill as straightforward and broadly popular, saying, "This should be the easiest yes vote this year" and that "The American people want the Save America Act." The remarks included two polling figures: "83% of adults support requiring a photo ID to vote" and "73% of Democrat voters" also support such a requirement. The speaker did not identify the source of those poll numbers during the remarks.
The speaker characterized opposition as partisan, saying Democratic lawmakers "oppose it, just as they have opposed every election integrity measure," and advanced more pointed allegations that Democrats "cannot win on their ideas" and that "their goal is to replace the votes of American citizens with those of illegal aliens." No response, data, or rebuttal appears in the transcript segment provided.
The remarks concluded with an appeal to lawmakers' responsibility: "House Republicans are standing up for the American people," and "Congress has a responsibility to protect the integrity of our elections. The Save America Act upholds that duty." The speaker closed by urging colleagues to "listen to the American people and vote yes" and then yielded back.
What was said in these segments is limited to the speaker's statements and claims; the transcript contains no formal motion, bill text, committee vote, or cited statutory language. Key numbers referenced in the remarks (the 83% and 73% figures) were not sourced in the transcript. The transcript also does not include any opposing statements, staff analysis, or an exchange testing the speaker's assertions.

