Lawsuit filed as DeSantis signs Florida’s version of the SAVE Act

News Service of Florida — As soon as Governor Ron DeSantis signed legislation Wednesday requiring voters to prove their citizenship in future elections, voting rights groups filed a legal challenge against it.

The bill (HB 991) part of which takes effect Jan. 1 — after the 2026 election cycle — is Florida’s version of the proposed federal Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) America Act. The state effort requires citizenship paperwork and a photo ID, such as a Florida driver’s license, U.S. Passport or concealed carry permit, when an individual registers to vote and before they vote at the ballot box. The Republican-controlled Legislature voted 27-12 in the Senate and 77-26 in the House on the proposal.

“This bill protects and expands integrity in our voter registration process by requiring the verification of U.S. citizenship when you're doing your voter registration,” DeSantis said at the Eisenhower Recreation Center in The Villages. “Our constitution says only American citizens are allowed to vote in our elections, and so, we need to make sure that is the law.”

DeSantis anticipated the lawsuit against the measure, describing efforts to combat the law as a “song and dance.” 

“They go to a liberal judge. The liberal judge sides with them. Then we appeal and we win,” DeSantis said.

The lawsuit by the League of Women Voters of Florida, Common Cause, Florida Rising, Florida Immigrant Coalition, Hispanic Federation, and UnidosUS was filed in the federal U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida. It contends the latest election changes by Florida violate the First and 14th Amendments of the U.S. Constitution, creating unnecessary barriers to voting by requiring prospective voters provide “evidence of citizenship.”

The suit asks the court to strike down the law and block Florida officials from enforcing the proof-of-citizenship requirement.

The bill requires an individual to provide identification such as a passport or birth certificate to register or remain on the voter rolls.

“Many eligible voters do not have these documents and cannot obtain them for a variety of reasons---including because they were born without a birth certificate in the segregated South, because their documents were destroyed in a hurricane, or because they cannot afford the hundreds of dollars it costs to replace them,” the lawsuit states. “At the same time, the law directs election officials to verify registered voters’ citizenship against government databases that were never designed for that purpose and that routinely misidentify citizens as noncitizens.”

The suit contends the documentation requirement will make it harder to vote for naturalized citizens, low-income voters, married women who’ve changed their name, nonwhite voters, students, voters with disabilities, transgender people, and seniors who may not have easy access to the needed documents.

“If this law stands, thousands of U.S. citizens will be removed from Florida's voter rolls, blocking them from voting in the next Presidential election if they can't afford specific documents,” forecast Common Cause Florida Executive Director Amy Keith in a release.

As the federal SAVE Act has stalled in the U.S. Senate, Trump on Tuesday evening signed an executive order requiring the states to deliver a list of voters receiving mail ballots to the administration, and ordering the U.S. Postal Service not to deliver any ballot to anyone not on the list. The order also requires tracking mechanisms for all mail ballots. In the state legislation DeSantis received, it also requires candidates to disclose whether they are dual citizens of another country.

The executive order also directs the U.S. Postmaster General to initiate rulemaking that would limit the U.S. Postal Service to transmit ballots only to individuals enrolled on a state-specific mail-in and absentee participation list. Mail-in ballots are not addressed in the state measure. 

Sen. Erin Grall, a Vero Beach Republican who sponsored the bill, called the changes “common sense” and the latest effort to distance Florida from the disaster of the 2000 election.

“We have real IDs that there is credibility and fidelity in, and we should be able to count on those,” Grall said during the bill signing event.