Analysis of Trump's proposed SAVE America Act reveals the sweeping electoral impact the voting restrictions legislation could have, with modeling showing it could flip competitive states dramatically in Republicans' favor—if it passes. However, a GOP insider raised a cautionary flag about how Republicans are deploying the SAVE Act in their political messaging.
According to data reported by OpenSourceZone citing Washington Post analysis, the estimated net two-party vote margin would shift substantially in Republican states if the SAVE Act becomes law:

Nevada: R+1 without the act → R+6.3 with the act
New Mexico: D+4 without the act → R+3.3 with the act
The New Mexico projection is particularly striking, showing a potential 7.3-point swing from Democratic advantage to Republican advantage—essentially flipping a blue state into red territory through the implementation of voter identification and citizenship verification requirements.
However, prominent conservative Erick Erickson made a major prediction about how Republicans are going to take advantage of the bill's failure.
"Republicans are talking themselves into victimhood. The SAVE Act isn't going to pass, which the GOP will use to explain away losses in November," Erickson warned.
Erickson's concern suggests that rather than viewing the SAVE Act as a legislative priority with genuine chance of passage, some Republicans may be using it as a pre-emptive excuse for electoral underperformance—a way to blame Democratic obstruction rather than confront their own unpopularity or policy failures.
The Washington Post modeling suggests what's at stake if the legislation did become law: a dramatically redrawn electoral map that could secure Republican control of competitive states. But Erickson's observation suggests Republicans may already be mentally preparing to lose that fight and are constructing a narrative to cushion the blow when they do.


