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Trump ties DHS funding deal to approval of voter bill, NewsNation reports

By Kanishka Singh

WASHINGTON, March 22 (Reuters) – U.S. President Donald Trump said on Sunday any Department of Homeland Security funding ‌deal should not be made until Democrats in Congress ‌approve a bill that requires people registering to vote to provide proof of U.S. ​citizenship.

Trump said he does not “think any deal should be made on this until they approve Save America,” a NewsNation reporter posted on X on Sunday, quoting Trump’s remarks from an interview.

The bill requiring proof ‌of citizenship for voter ⁠registration is called the Save America Act. It currently lacks the 60 votes needed to overcome Democratic ⁠opposition in the 100-member Senate, where Republicans hold 53 seats.

Trump also said he was prepared to deploy agents from the U.S. Immigration and ​Customs ​Enforcement, which is part of DHS, ​at airports “for as long ‌as it takes,” according to NewsNation. Trump this weekend said he would put ICE agents in airports until Democratic lawmakers agree to fund DHS.

“Now that I did this, the Democrats want to make a deal. And I don’t think any deal should be made ‌on this until they approve SAVE ​America,” Trump was quoted as saying.

Proponents of ​the bill have argued ​it would help deter voter fraud. Republicans have echoed ‌Trump’s false claim that large ​numbers of people ​who are in the country illegally vote in U.S. elections.

Democrats and other critics of the bill have argued that it ​could disenfranchise Americans who ‌lack ready access to passports, birth certificates and other ​forms of identification.

(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington; Editing ​by Sergio Non and Stephen Coates)

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