Greg Gutfeld dismantled Jessica Tarlov’s emotional outburst on Fox News, exposing the left’s frantic resistance to basic voter integrity as the SAVE America Act advances.
Story Snapshot
- House passes SAVE Act on February 11, 2026, mandating citizenship proof for federal voter registration.
- Gutfeld calls out Tarlov’s “meltdown” defending potential disenfranchisement over rare noncitizen voting risks.
- Bill integrates DHS SAVE system, overrides state rules, and faces Senate stall amid partisan firestorm.
- Conservatives champion it as common-sense security; opponents warn of millions blocked from ballots.
- Texas pilots reveal SAVE’s 0.04% flags but high false positives, fueling debate on real threats versus barriers.
Gutfeld-Tarlov Clash Ignites National Debate
Fox News’ The Five aired a mid-February 2026 segment where Greg Gutfeld confronted Jessica Tarlov over the SAVE America Act. Tarlov labeled the bill voter suppression, claiming it burdens 21 million citizens without easy access to documents like passports or birth certificates. Gutfeld countered that noncitizen voting threats demand proof, dismissing her reaction as hysterical resistance to election safeguards. The exchange went viral, amplifying conservative critiques of Democratic overreach.
Common sense aligns with Gutfeld’s stance: American elections require verifiable citizenship, prohibited since 1996. Tarlov’s fears overlook existing laws while ignoring integrity needs pushed by 2024 concerns from activists like Cleta Mitchell.
SAVE Act Mandates Documentary Proof of Citizenship
The SAVE America Act amends the 1993 National Voter Registration Act, requiring documentary proof such as REAL ID showing citizenship, passports, birth certificates, or military records for federal elections. States must submit voter rolls to DHS for Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements checks. Unlike 2024 versions that stalled in the Senate, the 2026 bill adds photo ID mandates and immediate enactment, preempting state procedures.
House Republicans passed it February 11, 2026, backed by White House advocacy framing it as crucial for integrity. Rep. Chip Roy sponsored prior iterations; Sen. Mike Lee leads the Senate push.
Opponents Highlight Disenfranchisement Risks
Jessica Tarlov argued the bill creates excessive barriers, potentially sidelining low-income, minority, and female voters lacking documents—146 million without passports, 69 million women with name changes. Brennan Center estimates 21 million affected citizens; Center for American Progress calls it extreme “show your papers.” League of Women Voters and Campaign Legal Center warn of restricted access in 49 states.
Texas’s 2025 SAVE pilots flagged only 0.04% noncitizens but erroneously removed naturalized citizens, raising false positive alarms. Bipartisan Policy Center notes noncitizen voting rarity, questioning the bill’s necessity despite minimal fraud evidence.
Political Power Plays and Stakeholder Motivations
Republicans hold House majority and Trump administration leverage, driving passage against Democratic Senate blocks. DHS implements SAVE, gaining control over state rolls—a federalization shift. Gutfeld amplifies the narrative on Fox; Tarlov represents progressive pushback. Influencers like Scott Pressler fuel grassroots demands post-2024.
Greg Gutfeld Shreds Jessica Tarlov’s On-Air Meltdown Over the SAVE Acthttps://t.co/e8sIPiZ0wK
— PJ Media (@PJMedia_com) March 18, 2026
Facts support conservative priorities: secure borders and elections protect American sovereignty. Opponent data, while from left-leaning sources, merits scrutiny but underscores administrative hurdles over proven widespread fraud.
Impacts and Uncertain Senate Path
Short-term, the bill disrupts 2026 primaries with mail-in curbs and ID rules in 35 states, risking higher rejections. Long-term, it federalizes rolls, invites litigation, and strains state autonomy. Economic costs hit state-DHS data sharing; socially, it erodes trust if false removals spike. As of March 2026, Senate inaction stalls it, mirroring 2024 failures.
NCSL warns of overriding state variances; neutral analyses urge caution given low fraud rates. Proponents like FAIR praise Trump; the clash reveals deeper divides on safeguarding democracy.
Sources:
9 Things to Know About the Proposed SAVE America Act
SAVE America Act – White House
House Passes New Version of SAVE Act; Brennan Center Responds
Five Things to Know About the SAVE Act
House Document: RCP_S1383_xml.pdf
SAVE Act Headed to Senate, Push to Restrict Voting Access
What You Need to Know About the SAVE Act
President Trump Pushes FAIR-Supported SAVE America Act






















