Latino voters overwhelmingly support requiring government-issued photo ID to vote. Polls conducted by Pew Research Center (2025) and CNN (2006) have independently confirmed that 82% of Latino voters in the United States approve such a requirement. According to CNN, about 85% of white voters agree, as well as 76% of black voters. The SAVE Act would codify in law the popular supermajority opinion on voter identification, but while the House has passed it multiple times, it has stalled in the Senate.
It should be no surprise that Latino voters support the key feature of the SAVE Act. First, immigrant voters highly value their citizenship and the right to vote that it conveys to them. It takes at least seven years of legal presence in the USA to become a citizen, and those who have gone through that process value what they learned and who they became in the process. They are proud and patriotic and zealous to preserve the system they have adopted and mastered. They do not take their rights as citizens lightly, and they do not want non-citizens to vote.
Second, immigrant voters highly value the rule of law, which they recognize as the main thing that makes the United States what it is – the best place in the world to work and build a prosperous and free life. While writing my book, “The New Pilgrims: How Immigrants are Renewing America’s Faith and Values,” I interviewed many immigrants who specifically explained that they moved to America for the purpose of coming under the rule of law. They understand that no justice, no equal protection under law, is possible without it. They can also articulate how lawlessness and cheating (la viveza criolla) undermine prosperity in their home countries. They understand that the land of the free and home of the brave persists because of America’s deep cultural commitment to obeying the law. They understand how illegal voting would undermine the very thing they value most about life in America.
Third, Latino immigrants, whether they are here legally or illegally, do not want non-citizens to vote in our elections. While the vast majority of illegal immigrants in America lead disciplined lives characterized by arduous labor, careful observance of the law, and moral practices such as church attendance, Latino immigrants recognize that there is a criminal element among many new immigrants that they do not want to empower in the United States. Many of the most vulnerable illegal immigrants fled to the United States to get away from such people in their countries of origin. They do not want to risk arrest, imprisonment, or deportation by voting illegally, and they certainly do not want the criminal element to do so.
Hispanic immigrants in the United States who have become citizens have a terrific record of success in building the American Dream of prosperity and freedom. Many current U.S. government officials and members of Congress illustrate spectacular success stories of immigrants and children of immigrants from Latin America: Marco Rubio, Ted Cruz (R-TX), Bernie Moreno (R-OH), and Maria Elvira Salazar (R-FL), not to mention Sonia Sotomayor, Alex Padilla (D-CA), Luz Rivas (D-CA), and many others on both sides of the aisle. Stories from industry, business, education, the military, the clergy, and every institution and profession in our society offer a literally never-ending story of Latino success in America. The system works beautifully for those who pay the price to become citizens and raise their children to love our country. As citizens, Latinos want to protect the democratic republic that has blessed their lives so richly.
Latino voters are not a monolith. They voted for the Republican and Democratic presidential candidates in nearly equal numbers in 2024. In future elections, they will vote for the candidates that best represent their values and support them in Congress. It’s time for both Democratic and Republican senators to represent the overwhelming Latino opinion and vote to pass the SAVE Act now, while there is still time to rescue America’s political integrity.