By Staff
Lindsey Graham just locked in another six year term. Tim Scott is safe until 2028 as NRSC chair. Both ran as Trump's men. Both campaigned on the mandate. Both promised to fight.
And right now, as the SAVE America Act rots in the Senate while roughly 80% of the country supports voter ID, South Carolina's two senators are giving the state two very different versions of the same problem. One gives you the floor fight and the Fox News hit. The other gives you the press conference and then vanishes. Neither gives you the win.
This is not a betrayal that just happened. This is a pattern that continues. South Carolina voters need to understand exactly what they're dealing with from both senators, from the Republicans who are actively sabotaging the bill, and from the ones who are fighting to save it and what leverage they still have.
Forget the rhetoric. Here is the single clearest measure of whether a Republican senator means what he says.
The SAVE America Act requires documentary proof of citizenship to register to vote and valid photo ID to cast a ballot. It passed the House in February. President Trump calls it a national emergency. He has canceled bill signings, withheld FISA reauthorization, and blown up confirmation hearings to force the Senate to act. Polling shows overwhelming public support the kind of numbers politicians normally kill for.
And the Senate has done nothing.
Not because the bill is unpopular. Not because it's unconstitutional. Not because it wouldn't pass if given a simple majority vote Mike Lee's version hit fifty votes during vote a rama, and with JD Vance breaking ties that's fifty one. It has the votes.
It's dead because of the filibuster. And neither of South Carolina's senators will do what it takes to break through.
Lindsey Graham: The Performer: Graham has been the most visible South Carolina voice on SAVE America. He's run multiple amendments. He's forced votes. He's called Democrats probably into cheating on the Senate floor. He's attached the bill to reconciliation packages and dared Schumer's caucus to vote against citizenship verification.
It all looks good on camera. And it all fails the same way every time.
Graham's amendments die at forty eight to fifty votes. The parliamentarian rules them out of order under the Byrd Rule. The filibuster stands. The bill stays dead. And Graham's response is to run the same play again and call it a fight.
What Graham will not do is the one thing that would actually work. He will not demand the talking filibuster that would force Democrats to stand on the Senate floor for two straight days explaining why they oppose citizenship verification. He will not call for Thune's removal. He will not tell the parliamentarian to pack her desk. He will not nuke the filibuster.
He has been in the Senate since 2003. These are his friends. He eats lunch with them. He will not burn down their cherished norms for a bill he claims to support. He will give South Carolina the floor speech. He will give them the Fox News hit for the next campaign ad. He will not give them the win.
Tim Scott: The Ghost: Scott's posture is different but the result is identical. In March, he stood at a press conference alongside John Thune and defended the SAVE America Act. He rejected the Democrat line that it's Jim Crow 2.0. He pointed out that overwhelming majorities in South Carolina and Georgia support voter ID. He said the quiet part out loud: "This is not about separating people. This is about making it easier to vote and harder to cheat."
It was a strong moment. It was also the last time he made any real noise.
Since then, Scott has been invisible on SAVE America. He didn't attach amendments. He didn't force votes. He didn't join Mike Lee in demanding the talking filibuster. He didn't pressure Thune. He didn't call out the four Republican defectors. He went back to his housing bill and his NRSC duties and let the moment pass.
And then Trump canceled the signing of Scott's signature legislation the ROAD to Housing Act, which passed the Senate eighty five to five explicitly to force action on SAVE America. Trump called it of minor importance compared to election integrity. Scott's office refused to comment. Not a statement. Not a push back. Not a demand. Just silence.
A senator whose own bill is being held hostage by the fight he won't join is a senator who has chosen his side. It's not the president's side. It's not South Carolina's side. It's the Senate club's side.
Every time SAVE America comes up for a vote, the same four Republicans join all forty seven Democrats to block it. South Carolina voters need to know exactly who they are and exactly what they're saying.
Susan Collins of Maine claims she supports the SAVE America Act in principle. She even flipped her vote to support Mike Lee's cleaner version during vote a rama. But she voted against Graham's amendment because she says requiring passports or birth certificates places an unnecessary burden on voters. She wants the concept without the teeth.
Lisa Murkowski of Alaska wrote an op-ed in the Anchorage Daily News explaining her opposition. Twenty percent of Alaska's population is off the road system. She argues the bill's documentation requirements would force some of her constituents to buy plane tickets and secure lodging just to register to vote. She calls the bill a federal takeover of elections and says it's unconstitutional. She is not persuadable.
Mitch McConnell of Kentucky leads the Senate Rules Committee and wrote in the Wall Street Journal that SAVE America would allow a future president and Congress to execute a complete federal takeover of American elections. He called it a voting gift to Democrats. The man who spent decades confirming judges and cutting taxes through brute force suddenly discovered federalism the moment election integrity hit the floor.
Thom Tillis of North Carolina is the most openly hostile of the four. He said in March he was "going to do everything I can to prevent it from even moving forward." He argues the bill should be an incentive program for states rather than a mandate. He calls the amendment votes show votes designed to send political messages rather than enact laws. He's not hiding. He's proud of his obstruction.
These four are the reason the bill cannot reach sixty votes. And neither Graham nor Scott has publicly named them, shamed them, or demanded consequences for them.
The contrast matters. South Carolina voters should know what a real fight looks like.
Mike Lee of Utah is the engine behind SAVE America. He got the original version to fifty votes during vote a rama. He publicly stated that without the filibuster, the bill would already be on Trump's desk. He has told Thune to either enforce the talking filibuster or nuke it entirely. He called the current system a zombie filibuster that empowers Democrats while pretending to protect debate. He's not just giving speeches. He's forcing the issue.
Josh Hawley of Missouri went on Fox News after the June vote and blasted the four Republican defectors by implication. "Voter ID is the most popular thing out there," he said. "There's a reason for that. People want their elections to be safe, they want them to be fair. And to me, you can't explain it to me, why you wouldn't vote for voter ID. I just don't understand it." He called it frustration. He called it inexplicable. He didn't protect his colleagues' feelings.
Tommy Tuberville of Alabama went further. He took to X and wrote that the four defectors "have not only betrayed their constituents they are ACCOMPLICES in Democrats' Illegals First agenda. The people of North Carolina, Alaska, Kentucky, and Maine deserve better." He named the betrayal publicly and directly.
Rick Scott of Florida invited Trump to the Senate GOP lunch without telling Thune. He sent his own legislative agenda to colleagues. He's demanded the Senate take votes on SAVE America every single week whether Democrats support it or not. He ran against Thune for leader and, despite his denials, nobody in the conference believes he's done trying.
Ron Johnson of Wisconsin has been telling colleagues they should be concerned about not doing enough on SAVE given how intensely it has animated the base. He's acknowledged that Democrats will kill the filibuster the moment they're back in power anyway, so Republicans might as well use it while they have it.
John Kennedy of Louisiana forced the first vote on SAVE America during the initial vote a rama. He's promised to force another one. He's not waiting for permission.
These are the senators treating SAVE America like an emergency. Graham gives speeches. Scott gives press conferences and disappears. Lee, Hawley, Tuberville, Rick Scott, Johnson, and Kennedy are actually trying to force an outcome.
South Carolina just bought the following from its two senators.
On election integrity, expect more amendments that fail, more floor speeches from Graham, more press conferences from Scott that lead nowhere, and zero results. The SAVE America Act will be exactly where it is today stalled for the remainder of Trump's term unless someone else forces the issue.
On the filibuster, neither Graham nor Scott will touch it. Graham has been in the Senate since 2003. Scott owes his leadership position to Thune. They will not burn down the institution for a bill. Which means every piece of Trump's agenda that cannot pass through reconciliation dies the same death SAVE America is dying right now.
On Senate leadership, neither will challenge Thune. Graham will eat lunch with him and explain that the president is being unreasonable. Scott literally predicted publicly that Thune will keep his job and said it like it was good news. When Trump fumes and cancels bill signings, Graham goes on Sunday morning television and urges everyone to be more realistic. Scott goes silent.
On public posture versus private reality, both senators will give South Carolina voters the show. Graham will give the fiery speech and the tough amendment. Scott will give the press conference and the righteous rejection of Jim Crow comparisons. What neither will give is a single outcome that required crossing their Senate colleagues in a way that actually mattered.
The Graham Cycle: He campaigns as Trump's closest ally, full of fire and brimstone on the stump. Then he governs as a Senate institutionalist, explaining that the math isn't there and nobody should upset the club. When a crisis hits, he goes on national television to publicly distance himself from Trump while sounding measured and reasonable. Then the next campaign arrives and he runs the old floor speech clips, promises to fight, and South Carolina votes him back in.
This is not new. This is not subtle. This is the product.
The Scott Cycle: He stands at the podium with Thune and delivers the perfect soundbite. He talks about South Carolina values. He rejects the race baiting from Democrats. He says the bill is about making it easier to vote and harder to cheat. The clip goes viral. The base feels heard. And then he goes back to his housing bill and his campaign committee work and lets the fight happen without him. When his own legislation gets taken hostage by the president to force action on SAVE America, he has nothing to say. His office doesn't return the calls.
He did the press conference. That was the entire contribution. The rest is silence.
Graham just won reelection. He's not on the ballot again until 2032. Scott is up in 2028. So the question is not whether you can replace them next cycle it's whether you can make them fear you now.
Make their phones ring off the hook. Both senators' offices take calls. Their staff track them. When the phones light up with one issue over and over, it changes the calculus not because they suddenly grow spines, but because they suddenly fear primary challengers who will run on their weakness. Call every office. Be specific. Name the bill. Name the four defectors. Ask why Graham won't demand the talking filibuster. Ask why Scott did one press conference and vanished. Ask why Mike Lee can get to fifty votes and South Carolina's senators can't get to fifty one.
Start primary pressure on day one. Graham won't face voters until 2032, but he watches what happens to other senators in the interim. Cornyn is gone. Other incumbents have fallen to Trump-backed challengers. Scott is up in 2028 and his silence on SAVE America while his housing bill sits on Trump's desk is a ready made primary attack. Both men need to know not suspect, but know that South Carolina is watching and that credible primary challengers are not out of the question. Scott chairs the NRSC. If his own state's base turns on him, the message travels to every Republican senator in the country.
Hold the state party accountable. The South Carolina GOP endorses both men. They platform them. They fund raise off their names. Make them answer for what Graham and Scott actually deliver versus what they promise. Pass resolutions at county party meetings demanding support for the talking filibuster. Ask hard questions at every forum about why South Carolina's senators won't join Mike Lee and Tommy Tuberville in publicly naming the Republican defectors. A state party that feels heat from below is a state party that communicates that heat upward.
Fund the challenger infrastructure now. Waiting until 2027 or 2031 to find candidates is how both men keep winning. The ground game for a serious primary challenge takes years to build donor networks, county chairs, activist lists, media relationships. If South Carolina wants senators who will actually fight like Lee and Hawley instead of just giving speeches like Graham or disappearing like Scott, that work starts now, not the year before the election.
Demand the talking filibuster specifically. This is the wedge issue that separates performers from fighters. The talking filibuster is not the nuclear option it preserves the filibuster while restoring its original form. Senators have to actually stand on the floor and speak to block a bill. It forces Democrats to defend non citizen voting on camera for days. Graham's refusal to demand even this modest procedural move tells you everything. Scott's refusal to even mention it tells you more. Make them answer for it. Publicly. Repeatedly. At every town hall, every county GOP dinner, every radio interview.
Don't let them hide behind the defectors. Graham and Scott may point to Collins, Murkowski, McConnell, and Tillis and say their hands are tied. The response is simple: Mike Lee got to fifty votes anyway. Tommy Tuberville named the traitors publicly. Josh Hawley called their votes inexplicable on national television. Rick Scott demanded weekly votes. What did South Carolina's senators do? Graham ran an amendment he knew would fail and called it a day. Scott did a press conference in March and hasn't been heard from since. The defectors are a problem. South Carolina's senators' refusal to make the defectors pay a political price is the bigger problem.
Lindsey Graham is not going to wake up one morning and decide to become Mike Lee. Tim Scott is not going to suddenly start making noise like Tommy Tuberville. Neither man is going to torch his relationships in the Senate club for a bill any bill. That is not who they are. That is not who they have ever been.
What can change is whether they fear the consequences of being who they are. Right now, they don't. South Carolina keeps sending Graham back. The base cheers Scott's press conferences and ignores his disappearances. The state party runs cover. The primary challengers never materialize with enough money and infrastructure to be credible.
If that stays the same, the next several years will look exactly like the last several months: amendments that fail, filibuster intact, Thune unchallenged, SAVE America stalled, Graham on television explaining why everyone needs to be more realistic, and Scott nowhere to be found.
South Carolina has two senators who know how to look like they're fighting. What they don't have and what they need to decide whether they actually want is a single senator who fights to win.
Sources:
Lindsey Graham SAVE America Act amendment "probably into cheating" floor speech June 2026
Four Senate Republicans again vote to kill Trump's SAVE Act voter ID bill | Fox News foxnews.com
Four GOP Senators Join Dems to Stop SAVE Act legalinsurrection.com
Tim Scott SAVE America Act press conference Thune March 2026 "harder to cheat"
Sen. Scott defends SAVE America Act, rejects Democrats calling it 'Jim Crow 2.0' abcnews4.com
Sen. Scott defends SAVE America Act, rejects Democrats calling it 'Jim Crow 2.0' abcnews4.com
Thune: Democrats Will Have to Answer for Their Voter ID Hypocrisy thune.senate.gov
Mike Lee SAVE America Act 50 votes "zombie filibuster" talking filibuster 2026
SAVE Act hits 50 Senate votes for first time during vote-a-rama push | Fox News foxnews.comTop Republicans tangle with Utah Sen. Mike Lee over SAVE America Act – Deseret News deseret.com
Tommy Tuberville Collins Murkowski McConnell Tillis "betrayed" SAVE Act X post 2026
Republicans Revolt Against Trump Again With SAVE Act Vote, Spark MAGA Fury - Newsweek newsweek.com
Tommy Tuberville Hit by Thom Tillis for Susan Collins Attack mediaite.comRepublicans Revolt Against Trump Again With SAVE Act Vote, Spark MAGA Fury yahoo.com
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