Presenter urges swift passage of "Save America Act," outlining five measures on voting, sports and youth care
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A single presenter urged Congress to pass the "Save America Act," describing five provisions: mandatory voter ID, citizenship proof for registration, ending universal mail voting with narrow exceptions, banning transgender athletes from women’s sports, and prohibiting gender-affirming surgery for minors. The speaker framed the bill as urgent and "rooted in common sense."
The presenter urged Congress to pass the "Save America Act," calling it "one of the most critical pieces of legislation in our nation's history" and saying the bill contains five requirements intended to strengthen election integrity and protect children.
The presenter framed the measure as widely supported and "rooted in common sense," saying, "The Save America Act has 5 simple requirements as requested by the president of The United States." He listed the five provisions in order.
First, the presenter said the bill would require voters to show photo identification to cast a ballot, calling the proposal "very simple" and asserting that "90% of Americans, including more than 80% of Democrat voters, agree with this." Second, he said the bill would require proof of citizenship to register to vote, which he described as necessary to ensure "only American citizens have the right to vote in American elections." The presenter tied that proposal to a claim that, "after Joe Biden and the Democrats allowed tens of millions of illegal aliens into our country, it's more important than ever to ensure that only American citizens are registering."
Third, the presenter said the bill would abolish universal mail-in ballots while retaining exceptions for illness, disability, military service, and travel. He cited what he called "the bipartisan 2005 report of the Commission on Federal Election Reform" and quoted its language, saying the report "concluded that, 'absentee ballots remain the largest source of potential voter fraud.'" The presenter characterized universal mail voting as "incredibly unsecure."
Fourth, he said the Save America Act would "permanently ban men from competing in women's sports," and urged Congress to codify into law an executive order he said upheld protections under Title IX. Fifth, the presenter said the measure would prohibit gender-affirming surgery for minors, calling such procedures "transgender mutilation surgery for children" and saying Congress should codify his prior executive action.
Throughout the statement, the presenter framed these provisions as bipartisan priorities for election integrity and child protection and closed with a direct appeal: "The president is calling on Congress to get the job done and send this historic piece of legislation to his desk immediately for signature."
What was said in this statement reflects assertions and policy proposals made by the presenter during the remarks. The article reports those claims and cited sources (for example, the referenced 2005 Commission report) as presented; it does not attempt to verify factual assertions made during the statement.
