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Chuck Schumer Lambasted After Comparing the SAVE Act to Jim Crow

The modern American left has an ugly habit of reaching for the biggest historical trauma it can find when it wants to shut down a debate.

Slavery, segregation, Jim Crow, fascism — nothing is too grave or too blood-soaked to be repurposed as a rhetorical club.

This isn’t just asinine and lazy. It’s fundamentally corrosive to the republic.

Like, for instance, when leftist lawmakers treat colorblind, baseline election rules as moral equivalents of racial terror, they’re cheapening history and poisoning public trust. Worse, they teach voters that words like “oppression” and “racism” are just props in a hackneyed, partisan script, not descriptions of real and specific evils.

And yet the tactic persists, which tells you everything you need to know about the incentives at work. Outrage travels faster than argument, and historical guilt is easier to weaponize than facts.

That brings us to Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, who recently decided that the Safeguarding American Voter Eligibility Act belongs in the same moral category as Jim Crow. Seriously.

“The SAVE Act would impose Jim Crow style restrictions on voting,” Schumer posted to X on Monday. “It will be dead on arrival in the Senate.”

(Of note, the SAVE Act has become a sticking point in a congressional spending bill that aims to end the ongoing partial-government shutdown.)

“I have said it before and I’ll say it again, the SAVE Act would impose Jim Crow type laws to the entire country and is dead on arrival in the Senate,” Schumer said. “It is a poison pill that will kill any legislation it is attached to.”

He added, “Let’s be clear, the SAVE Act is not about securing our elections. It is about suppressing voters. The SAVE Act seeks to disenfranchise millions of American citizens, seize control of our election, and fan the flames of election skepticism and denialism.”

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Let this writer pick apart that last line, bit-by-forsaken-bit.

This “is about suppressing voters”? Oh, really, Chuckie? This might actually be one of the oldest tricks in the Democratic playbook.

The SAVE Act’s stated purpose is straightforward: require proof of citizenship to vote in federal elections. You can argue about implementation, edge cases, or administrative burden — but leaping straight to “voter suppression” skips the actual policy question and replaces it with a moral accusation. That’s not an argument for or against anything. That’s just branding.

The SAVE Act will “disenfranchise millions” of American voters? Notice how much work “millions” is doing in this audacious claim. How many citizens currently lack any form of acceptable proof? How many couldn’t obtain it? Schumer doesn’t say, because the number is likely far smaller — and because once you start talking specifics, the apocalypse narrative collapses rather tidily.

The “seize control of our election” bunk hardly deserves a response, but I’ll give it a stab anyhow. From whom, exactly, is control being seized? States already run elections under a thick web of federal law. Requiring proof of citizenship for federal voting doesn’t “seize control” so much as it sets a baseline eligibility check — like when someone wants to gamble or purchase alcohol.

As far as fanning “the flames of election skepticism and denialism,” that’s awful rich coming from the party that can’t seem to handle any single Stacey Abrams electoral loss with grace (or without an excuse), and a party that had no issue calling President Donald Trump “illegitimate” after he trounced then-Democratic ringleader Hillary Clinton in the 2016 general election.

But it’s not just this astute writer noticing how abysmal Schumer’s rhetoric is. Social media basically had a field day at Schumer’s well-deserved expense.

“The SAVE Act requires proof of American citizenship to vote in our elections,” fired back Ohio State GOP Rep. Josh Williams on X. “To even suggest that segregation is even remotely in the same category is an insult to our intelligence. But we’re aware that the Democratic Party is desperate to allow illegal aliens to vote.”

Another X user pointed out the obvious fallacy with what Schumer was peddling: “Calling election integrity ‘Jim Crow’ is historical malpractice. Requiring proof of citizenship to vote is not segregation. It does not target race. It applies universally.”

Another X user also responded to Schumer, this time noting the racist overtones of the New York lawmaker’s messaging:

“Why is voter ID an issue for minorities?” the X user wrote in response to Schumer. “Why are you people so racist?”

At some point, the question stops being why basic election safeguards are controversial and starts being why certain politicians insist on framing minority voters as uniquely incapable of meeting ordinary civic standards. When critics ask, “Why is voter ID an issue for minorities… Why are you people so racist?” they’re not being glib (or just being glib).

That exact line of thought exposes the quiet, ugly assumption underneath Schumer’s entire line of attack. The claim that minorities can’t obtain identification, can’t navigate basic bureaucracy, or can’t meet the same requirements everyone else does is little more than condescension dressed up as moral concern.

Schumer’s rhetoric depends on that condescension, even as it pretends to fight it.

By treating straightforward eligibility checks as a form of racial harm, he’s not defending civil rights — he’s lowering standards around those rights and laundering them through the language of justice. If the only way to oppose the SAVE Act is to imply that millions of minority citizens are uniquely helpless, then the problem isn’t the law.

It’s the argument — and the profoundly cynical view of the people it claims to protect.

Bryan Chai has written news and sports for The Western Journal for more than five years and has produced more than 1,300 stories. He specializes in the NBA and NFL as well as politics.

Bryan Chai has written news and sports for The Western Journal for more than five years and has produced more than 1,300 stories. He specializes in the NBA and NFL as well as politics. He graduated with a BA in Creative Writing from the University of Arizona. He is an avid fan of sports, video games, politics and debate.

Birthplace

Hawaii

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Class of 2010 University of Arizona. BEAR DOWN.

Location

Phoenix, Arizona

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English, Korean

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Sports, Entertainment, Science/Tech

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