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Norms Impact

Susan Collins hands Trump the 50th vote against free and fair elections

A single senator’s “yes” puts a federal election-restriction bill one tie-break away from overriding state voting rules and narrowing access at the national level.

Congress

Feb 19, 2026

Sources

Summary

Maine Sen. Susan Collins added her name as the 50th Senate supporter of the SAVE America Act. That alignment positions the Senate to pass a federal elections bill with a tie-breaking vote from Vice President JD Vance. The practical consequence is federal pressure to override state election rules, including Maine’s ID policies, by restricting who can register and vote.

Reality Check

This conduct normalizes federal power being used to impose restrictive voting rules over states’ longstanding election systems, weakening the baseline expectation that access to the ballot is expanded through transparent, rights-protective processes. Nothing in the described actions is likely criminal on its face, because supporting legislation and appearing in the Oval Office are core political acts. The deeper breach is governance: lending institutional cover to a bill that would override state law on voter ID and to rhetoric urging federal takeover of vote counting, a pattern that corrodes democratic stability and, ultimately, our own ability to vote on equal terms.

Detail

<p>Maine Sen. Susan Collins became the 50th Senate supporter of the SAVE America Act, a bill promoted by Donald Trump. With 50 supporters, if the measure reaches the Senate floor and the chamber divides evenly, Vice President JD Vance would be positioned to cast a tie-breaking vote to pass it.</p><p>The SAVE America Act would require states to change aspects of their current election laws. In Maine, where state policy has allowed students to use a college ID for voter registration, the bill would categorically ban college and university IDs from being used to vote regardless of state law.</p><p>The context described includes Collins’ prior opposition during the Biden administration to the For the People Act, the Freedom to Vote Act, and the John R. Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act. Two weeks before supporting the SAVE America Act, Collins stood in the Oval Office as Trump repeated claims about elections and called for the federal government to take over vote counting in certain parts of the country.</p>