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Petulant Trump Won’t Sign Landmark Housing Bill. It Will Become Law Anyway

A bipartisan bill Trump refuses to sign will become law this weekend.

Petulant Defiance

Truth Social: I will not sign the Housing Bill, which has been fully approved by Congress and sent to the White House, in PROTEST over the fact that the United States Senate is not capable of passing THE SAVE AMERICA ACT, which is polling at 97% with the Republican Party, and very high with the non-politician Dumocrats. The Act states, quite simply, that to Vote a person must show PHOTO VOTER I.D., PROOF OF CITIZENSHIP, AND THAT THERE WILL BE NO MORE CROOKED, CORRUPT, & DESTABILIZING MAIL-IN BALLOTS (EXCEPTIONS for Military, Disabled, Illness, and Travel!). THE SAVE AMERICA ACT’S non-passage is CRAZY, and a serious threat to any politician who votes against it! If the Dumocrats, or any RINO (or worse!) working with them, do not allow a positive Vote on SAVE AMERICA, TERMINATE THE FILIBUSTER, and pass this, and every other Bill that true Republicans have ever dreamt of (In addition to the upcoming Budget BOMB and the 1929 catastrophic style DEBT CEILING BILL!). The Dumocrats will TERMINATE THE FILIBUSTER, if and when they ever get the chance to do so, in their very first hour – And I will no longer be able to call them Dumocrats again! The title of DUMB will revert to the Republicans who allowed this horrible calamity to happen to our Party, and our Nation, itself! MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN! President DONALD J. TRUMP

Jul 10, 2026, 7:16 AM

The Wall Street Journal reports Trump Says He Won’t Sign Landmark Housing Bill

Congress passed the housing measure with big bipartisan majorities. But the president canceled the original signing ceremony last month and said he wouldn’t sign the bill until Congress passed stalled legislation to toughen voter-eligibility requirements. On top of the core voter-ID provisions, Trump wants to ban most mail-in voting nationwide. He also has demanded provisions ending transgender women’s participation in female sports and ending gender-related treatments for children.

Trump’s decision blindsided lawmakers who had been ready to declare the housing bill a rare bipartisan victory on a popular issue squeezing voters’ budgets. Real-estate industry leaders were also thrown off by the last-minute cancellation after they spent months lobbying to ensure certain provisions wouldn’t negatively affect their businesses.

Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson met with the White House later in June after which he told reporters he would send the bill to the president’s desk. Johnson transmitted the bill to the White House on June 29, starting a 10-day clock, excluding Sundays, for the president to sign the bill, veto it or let it become law without his signature.

The housing bill includes 50-some provisions aimed at making it easier to build homes and boost housing affordability. Home builders and developers say it could help at the margins. But most of the obstacles to housing production revolve around local zoning and building regulations that the federal government doesn’t have the authority to overhaul.

Even with Trump’s vow not to sign the bill, housing leaders are already preparing for it to become law. They are also trying to ensure that it doesn’t fizzle out as it gets implemented. 

National Housing Conference Chief Executive David Dworkin said his organization is using artificial intelligence for analyzing the bill’s provisions to offer the administration a blueprint for implementation as quickly as possible.

No Pocket Veto Here

A pocket veto allows a president to kill a bill by not signing it when there are less than 10 days left in the Congressional session.

That does not apply here. Once House Speaker Mike Johnson presented the bill to Trump, he had 10 days to sign it or veto it.

President Abraham Lincoln famously used a pocket veto to kill the Wade-Davis Bill on July 8, 1864. The congressional Reconstruction bill demanded that 50 percent of a Confederate state’s white male population take an “Ironclad Oath” of past and present loyalty to the Union before readmittance.

Had Lincoln vetoed the bill, it would have been possible for Congress to override it.

Bipartisan Signing Ceremony Cancelled

In June, after Trump refused to sign, a bipartisan celebration was cancelled.

If you think it’s stupid for Republicans to pass up an opportunity like that, well, so do I.

Trump Lies Regarding Save Act

  1. The Act does far more than require an ID. It also kills most mail-in ballots.
  2. Trump demanded and got provisions ending transgender women’s participation in female sports and ending gender-related treatments for children.
  3. The ID requirements were purposely onerous on female and and minority voters, especially married women.

Point two, is just plain stupid, whether one agrees or disagrees with the idea. It made the bill a bit harder to pass.

I believe, but would rather not find out in Court, that points one and three are unconstitutional.

Here’s a three-point explanation.

1. Congress Lacks Authority to Impose Voter Qualifications.

The U.S. Constitution delegates the power to set voter qualifications—such as age, residency, and citizenship—to the states, with limited federal overrides via amendments (e.g., the 15th, 19th, and 26th Amendments prohibiting discrimination based on race, sex, or age).

The SAVE Act’s proof-of-citizenship requirement effectively establishes a new national qualification for voting by mandating documentation that verifies citizenship status, which exceeds Congress’s role under the Elections Clause. This clause allows Congress to regulate procedural aspects like how elections are conducted, but not who is eligible to participate.

In Arizona v. Inter Tribal Council of Arizona (2013), the Supreme Court struck down a similar state-level proof-of-citizenship requirement for federal elections, ruling it conflicted with the NVRA’s simpler attestation process.

By amending the NVRA to impose such a requirement nationwide, the SAVE Act is overreach.

2. Violation of the National Voter Registration Act and Supremacy Clause Issues

Although the SAVE Act seeks to amend the NVRA, it would conflict with the NVRA’s original intent to streamline registration and reduce barriers.

The NVRA requires only a sworn attestation of citizenship under penalty of perjury, and courts have invalidated stricter state measures as preempted by federal law.

Kansas’s similar proof-of-citizenship law, for instance, was ruled unconstitutional after blocking over 30,000 eligible voters.

The SAVE Act’s nationwide mandate could be seen as an end-run around these rulings, potentially violating the Supremacy Clause by forcing states to adopt federal standards that disrupt their own election administration without clear constitutional justification. This preemption of state processes, including online and mail-in registration, would impose unfunded burdens on local officials and expose them to legal risks, further straining the federal-state balance.

3. Undue Burden on the Fundamental Right to Vote

Voting is a fundamental right protected by the First and Fourteenth Amendments, and laws imposing severe burdens must survive strict scrutiny—meaning they must be narrowly tailored to a compelling government interest.

The SAVE Act would disenfranchise millions of eligible citizens, especially women and minorities who lack easy access to required documents.

Estimates suggest 21 million Americans don’t have readily available proof of citizenship, with disproportionate impacts on women (due to name changes), low-income voters, rural residents, students, older adults, and minorities.

Requiring in-person submission and excluding common IDs like student or state-issued cards adds barriers, potentially amounting to a modern poll tax if obtaining documents incurs costs (violating the 24th Amendment).

Non-citizen voting is already illegal and exceedingly rare (e.g., audits in Georgia and elsewhere found negligible instances), so the Act’s burdens far outweigh any demonstrated need, failing constitutional tests under cases like Anderson v. Celebrezze (1983).

On March 4, I cited Three Reasons the Save Act Is Unconstitutional

The SAVE Act won’t pass, and that’s a good thing.

Synopsis

While the Act aims to enhance election integrity, its unconstitutionality stems from encroaching on state powers, conflicting with established federal law, and erecting discriminatory barriers to voting.

The purpose of the act is to disenfranchise women and minorities who tend to vote Democratic.

The act is not about “voter ID” or it would not be written the way that it was.

If Trump tries to do this by Executive Order as threatened, there is a near 100 percent chance of swift court strike down, and the Supreme Court will not come to Trump’s aid. [Note this has indeed played out because Trump did try Executive Orders]

I am proud of my call because the consensus opinion at the time was the SAVE Act would pass by the end of this year.

Polymarket now has the odds of passage at 8 percent.

That’s too high. There are not enough votes to pass. It needs 60 votes to clear then Senate when it’s doubtful there are even 50.

There are at most 45 votes for changing the rules to kill the Filibuster.

Court Strikes Trump’s Executive Order on SAVE Voter-Verification System

On June 22, 2026, I reported Court Strikes Trump’s Executive Order on SAVE Voter-Verification System

The League of Women Voters prevails over Trump in court.

That was the easiest prediction in the world.

The nomenclature is confusing. The SAVE Voter-Verification System is part of the SAVE Act, but Trump tried to do it by Executive Order as well.

Trump’s Voting Claims Are False

Also see Trump’s Voting Claims Are False. So What Is the Save Act Really About?

The SAVE Act is dead. Either get over it or cheer to your liking.

I have been cheering the demise from the beginning. Had Republicans opted for bills with simple voter-ID provisions, I could have supported them.

But I refuse to support any legislation, by either party, whose sole intent is voter suppression to steal an election.

That’s what the SAVE Act is. And I am tired of Republican lies to present that unconstitutional monstrosity as a popular voter-ID bill.

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42 Comments
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Stu
Stu
8 hours ago

– Had Republicans opted for bills with simple voter-ID provisions, I could have supported them. > Sadly, that was what they were supposed to be offering up. I equally support that as well. Why go for a power grab, when you accomplished what you wanted, and I personally agree with. Now we missed that opportunity and caused disruption for nothing, accomplished nothing, and look silly stupid.

> I will say it again, as it needs repeating obviously. Get Trump out of the negotiations, and “Shut the Man Up!! a microphone should never be in this man’s hands…

– But I refuse to support any legislation, by either party, whose sole intent is voter suppression to steal an election.
> Agreed 100%

– I am tired of Republican lies to present that unconstitutional monstrosity as a popular voter-ID bill.
> A lot of Republicans are growing tired of it as well. I am one of them! We had a bill that would pass, but he had to go yapping and change things, and now we don’t accomplish what was already accomplished, as he flushed it down the drain! Stop Talking Trump!!!

peter
peter
11 hours ago

100% agree with you Mish.

‘Lil Mr.
‘Lil Mr.
14 hours ago

I think you’ve cooked this one pretty good Mish. It’s not going to happen and with the bipartisan bill passing, the stranglehold Taco has may be waning which is a very good thing. How about some interesting ballot initiatives coming up. Has the gerrymandering ended? What’s the final score? Flock cameras? Politicians are now addressing them. At least candidates are and some are vowing to get rid of them. What is their constitutionality? Sorry if you have already addressed any of these.

ian
ian
20 hours ago

nice Call Mish

yippee
yippee
23 hours ago

all evil warmongering empires end. pax amerika will be no different. might be great times ahead as she folds up her offshore bases and issues new currency………

MPO45v2
MPO45v2
23 hours ago

Mish,

We need a post and your investigative eye and analysis on the mystery of Mitch McConnell. The internet are all saying he is brain dead and its all being covered up to prevent a special election which will certainly go to democrats.

https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/mitch-mcconnell-ambulance-stretcher-video-health-update.html

ChrisFromGA
ChrisFromGA
22 hours ago
Reply to  MPO45v2

It just keeps getting more and more sketchy … as one commenter on X pointed out, who orders the latest shade of grey carpet on display at Home Depot when their husband is in critical condition in the hospital?

I know when my loved ones are in critical condition, the first thing I do is call the carpet guy!

peelo
peelo
21 hours ago
Reply to  MPO45v2

This weirdly echoes, for me, McConnell’s refusal to bring Obama’s nominee for the Supreme Court, Merrick Garland, to a vote in the Senate, in the year before Trump’s election.

Stu
Stu
7 hours ago
Reply to  peelo

I don’t think he will ever be back at work, by the sounds of it. Maybe He shouldn’t be, is probably more appropriate than having him try to go back, and go further down the road of incompetence as his legacy…

Stu
Stu
7 hours ago
Reply to  MPO45v2

>> My understanding is that has been in the hospital since June 14, and the Kentucky senator’s office has provided few health updates.

– Laura Loomer has claimed the 84-year-old former Republican majority leader is “brain dead” and will never return to the Senate. > Not sure that’s true, but he was having issues of some sort for years now imo.

– But several of McConnell’s friends and colleagues say they’ve just spoken to him on the phone and he’s eager to get back to work. > I highly doubt that’s going to happen. He was challenged already, and with this innuendo, Voters won’t want or allow him to serve any longer. I don’t think he should have been serving for years now already. You had a sweet run, now go home and live out your final days… I wish for good health for you!!

Rogerroger
Rogerroger
23 hours ago

It would be interesting to see the break down of who would not be allowed to vote combined with party affiliation. Judging by the yards and vehicles i see trump signs in hes throwing a good chunk of his base under the bus. Which makes me think its not about voter suppression at all. Its about being able to claim enough voter fraud for the republican party and donors. ( not so much the voter) to seize power.
Personally i think the wealthy know the trickle down economy lie has ran its course and they are about to get taxed at pre Reagan levels. Combined with a good chunk are gonna be outed as pedos.
Remember every accusation is a confession. And trump and republicans were claiming the swamp was full of dem pedos.

Also something to consider is businesses and very wealthy are not limited by national boundaries and will jump this ship whenever their gravy train run out. Ie privatize profits publicize debt.

Flavia
Flavia
23 hours ago
Reply to  Rogerroger

No they won’t. They’ll get taxed somewhere else. S’why they’re here.

peelo
peelo
21 hours ago
Reply to  Flavia

There have been attempts to unify tax structures across states and nations for decades, to prevent this sort of shopping for a tax domicile. Always the individual government entities sense (or are persuaded) they can play the fragmentation for advantage, and the rich get their fragmentation, and their tax breaks. Major US corporations, not least, Big Tech, are playing this to the tune of tens of billions right this moment.

Tom
Tom
21 hours ago
Reply to  Flavia

True. But if the environment changes to one that prosecutors predators and taxes the ever loving shit out of the billionaires then wouldn’t they have incentive to jump ship?Maybe Argentina?

certi
certi
1 day ago

Good on Trump for this one. There’s a lot of corruption build into this ‘bipartisan bill’. Fighting one bill with another is just politics. Strange how its fine sometimes, but not others.

And yes, this statement is ridiculous and condescending.

“The SAVE Act would disenfranchise millions of eligible citizens, especially women and minorities who lack easy access to required documents.”

Almost ALL these forementioned citizens have ID,and use ID every day to do thousands of other things (like drive, buy beer, etc, own/rent a house, get a job).

Its a complete lie, and all the more revealing in who is willing to push it and expect others to believe it.

Women and minorities aren’t actually that limited. Despite the inference.

peelo
peelo
21 hours ago
Reply to  certi

My mom couldn’t prove her citizenship without enormous hardship, as an American born white woman, age 94. It might be difficult to do so before this November, and would be costly. And physically, she would have great difficulty accessing a polling place. Your bald-faced conclusions carry no weight with me.
I see the timing here in relation to midterms as no coincidence. I see it as a conscious effort to tip an election against the probable majority’s will, or at least evade the consequences of Trump’s mistakes and public ire. I don’t have to like the Dems to see it this way.

Last edited 21 hours ago by peelo
Tom
Tom
21 hours ago
Reply to  certi

I have only one thing to say to you.

EVIDENCE?

Feral Finster
Feral Finster
19 hours ago
Reply to  Tom

Evidence is for terrasists and commies.

Real Patriotic American (R) just make shit up.

Last edited 19 hours ago by Feral Finster
CzarChasm Reigns
CzarChasm Reigns
1 day ago

tired of Republican lies”…

me too.

njbr
njbr
1 day ago

By now everyone should know how manipulated and broken the federal agencies are

Even if the bill turns into law through inaction, where are the police who will make the responsible agencies act as new law dictates

Tom
Tom
21 hours ago
Reply to  njbr

You want the Police to get involved in a bill that focuses on housing affordability. What are they going to do? Are you expecting them to taser the building inspectors?

Please note that the bill that’s about to pass is on Housing, not voting

Last edited 21 hours ago by Tom
njbr
njbr
1 day ago

Schrodinger’s’ War

Donald Trump
@realDonaldTrump • Truth Social icon Truth Social • July 10, 2026 @ 10:32 AM ET
Truth Social icon
View on Truth Social
The Islamic Republic of Iran has asked us to continue “talks.” We have agreed to do so, but the United States has stated to them, in no uncertain terms, that the Cease Fire is OVER! Thank you for your attention to this matter. President DONALD J. TRUMP

Tom
Tom
21 hours ago
Reply to  njbr

What happened to Japan? 🤣🤣

Tom
Tom
1 day ago

You mention that a lot of this is moot because of years of legal precedent. Seems reasonable enough.

But isn’t this the SCORUS that took a shit on the concept of precedent cutting that it was simply wrong and didn’t have hard standing in the construction? I’m thinking abortion is one example.

Why do you think they won’t simply come back and say that the last century was just misguided by some nefarious group (godless commies, woke libtards, uppity females)?

peelo
peelo
21 hours ago
Reply to  Tom

We are in a time when any precedent, or constitutional interpretation, may fall, quite radically. At least one “originalist” justice’s SCOTUS opinion held that the changes in immigration (recent facts n the ground) somehow changed the meaning of the 14th Amendment’s 1860’s grant of citizenship rights. I have spent 41 years teaching law a certain, fairly straightforward way, given all the oddities, but I have grown substantially more cynical about the process now.

MPO45v2
MPO45v2
1 day ago

Excellent post.

The SAVE Act’s proof-of-citizenship requirement effectively establishes a new national qualification for voting by mandating documentation that verifies citizenship status, which exceeds Congress’s role under the Elections Clause. 

What no one is talking about is that there is no way to verify who is who at all. The gestapo’s own e-verify system keeps making mistakes so if the e-verify system which is supposed to flag illegal aliens isn’t working then how will any of this work for voting?

https://edition.cnn.com/2025/08/27/us/e-verify-immigration-law

 “The Old Orchard Beach Police Department’s reckless reliance on E-Verify to justify arming an illegal alien, Jon Luke Evans violates federal law, and does not absolve them of their failure to conduct basic background checks to verify legal status,” said Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin.

The statement from the federal government agency responsible for E-Verify saying it is “reckless” to rely on its own system brought new attention to the program’s weaknesses, even as the Trump administration makes removing undocumented workers from the country one of the top priorities in its aggressive, ongoing immigration crackdown. 

Of course Trump doesn’t care because it’s not about voting, it’s about voter suppression, something scumbag republicans do frequently. Anything to stay in power but those days are coming to an end. It’s like watching the passengers off the Titanic swimming, flailing, sinking in the cold, cold waters of the North Atlantic.

Tom
Tom
21 hours ago
Reply to  MPO45v2

If somebody voted for a Republican then the vote is valid. If somebody voted for anyone else, their invalid at best and illegal for the rest.

Are you seriously think we need to start trying to get our heads around the idea that, while we will go through the motions of an election in November, the input to that election will be summarily rejected and that may involve trying to suspend the Constitution as a national emergency or national security or some other bullshit.

America sucks at protesting. We were so much better in the ’60s. Now people are either entirely focused on their 401k with no interest on the rest of the world or so desperate to not starve to death and end up homeless that they can’t possibly do anything which could in any way cause them to lose their jobs.

This is a neo-slavery. I know it sounds pretty radical but think about it. There are many people who will not entertain any form of civil disobedience because they don’t have time, they can’t afford to lose their job, they can’t afford to get arrested (legal fees, fines, bail). They can’t disparage their field boss or the master.

David Heartland
David Heartland
1 day ago

Here we have all of this hand-wringing over an act that has US doing something that is DELUSIONAL: BELIEVING POLITICAL CAMPAIGN PROMISES.

Voting is as stupid as arguing one “side or the other” because those SIDES are over ISSUES that THEY WILL NEVER SOLVE and be seen as PROBLEMS.

Voting in inane. Thus, arguing over it is as stupid as arguing with being shot or stabbed in your eye. EITHER WAY, you then blinded and likely DEAD.

Creamer
Creamer
1 day ago

When YOU struggle to spell BASIC WORDS and MAUL “grammar” like THIS, people tend to think you are RETARDED.

peelo
peelo
21 hours ago

So by that sort of logic, we are all going to die, so why not just lay down and stop eating, today, right? Because we are all screwed anyway, right? And sometime, prices of assets will disappoint us, so why not just be abjectly poor? Why not stop trying?

Last edited 21 hours ago by peelo
Tom
Tom
20 hours ago

Can you offer any solutions or are we all just going to die and might as well just get going with that?

Stu
Stu
7 hours ago

So to be sure I understand what you are stating here…

1. If I Vote I am going to die.
2. If I vote nothing will change.
3. If I vote I am stupid.
4. If I vote I’m delusional.

Wow, I best not tell anyone I voted, if I do (catch that?). Wait a damn minute, nobody knows “I Voted” or what I voted for, or even if I did, as I was behind a curtain!

Now with that being said:

1. I may not die because I Voted.
2. My Vote just may count, and things could change.
3. I was smart to Vote after all.
4. I may still be delusional, but that was already before Voting.

I am going to be OK, Whew… I dodged a big one!!!

Nate
Nate
1 day ago
Creamer
Creamer
1 day ago
Reply to  Nate

If this doesn’t go to show exactly what his plan for November is, nothing does.

Lose in a landslide, call it rigged, January six part deux a la mode!

David Heartland
David Heartland
1 day ago
Reply to  Nate

CUT TO THE CHASE and FIRE THEM NOW!

Nate
Nate
1 day ago

I believe the article says that is what has already happened.

Blurtman
Blurtman
1 day ago

By attestation, Elizabeth Warren is an Indian, Rachel Dolezal is black, and Rachel Levine is a woman.

MPO45v2
MPO45v2
1 day ago
Reply to  Blurtman

And all republicans are scumbags.

SleemoG
SleemoG
1 day ago
Reply to  MPO45v2

And pedos or pedo-sympathetic.

yippee
yippee
1 day ago

trump is amerikan as apple pie……..Persia from 1953 ike overthrow to 
operation epstein distraction has worked perfectly well.  Amerikans love this stuff. Democracy works perfectly well.  Long live the Roman Empire 

Mike R
Mike R
1 day ago

Res ipsa loquitar.

The utter stupidity of drumpf is mind boggling.

Tony Frank
Tony Frank
1 day ago

Not surprised at anything the “man child” does or will do. Definitely, petulant.

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