Minnesota Law Now

In this episode of Minnesota Law Now, Professor Jill Hasday, Distinguished McKnight University Professor and Centennial Professor of Law, and Professor Charlotte Garden, Associate Dean for Academic Affairs, and Gray, Plant, Mooty, Mooty & Bennett Professor of Law, sit down with Dean William McGeveran to break down the constitutional stakes of the SAVE Act — from voting access and equal protection to its disproportionate impact on women, particularly those navigating name changes. They also explore the law’s broader ripple effects, including potential consequences for labor and employment rights, workplace verification systems, and economic participation.

What is Minnesota Law Now?

Minnesota Law Now is a new podcast from the University of Minnesota Law School that brings together some of today’s most insightful legal scholars in conversation about law, policy, current events, and the ideas that shape our world.

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Welcome to Minnesota Law Now.

I'm William McGeveran, Dean

and William S. Pattee
Professor of Law here

at the University
of Minnesota Law School.

Today, we're talking about

the SAVE Act currently
pending in Congress,

what it could mean
not just for voting rights

but for participation
in American life more broadly.

I'm joined by two of my brilliant

Minnesota Law colleagues.

Professor Jill Hasday
is a distinguished McKnight

University Professor
and Centennial Professor of Law.

She's a leading scholar
of constitutional law

and anti-discrimination law.

Charlotte Garden is Associate Dean

for Academic Affairs
and the Gray, Plant, Mooty,

Mooty & Bennett Professor
of Law here at Minnesota Law.

She's a preeminent scholar
in labor and employment law.

Jill, Charlotte, welcome.

Thank you.

Thanks for having us.

I want to start with a basic
understanding of what the SAVE

Act is and what it would do.

Charlotte, maybe you can just start
us off with some explanation.

Yes, sure.

There have been a few
different versions

of this legislation floating around.

There is one that passed the House.

It has four main parts.

One, and this is maybe the one

that people have heard
about the most,

has to do with voter registration.

It requires what the statute
calls documentary

proof of citizenship
in order to register to vote.

That has to be presented in person.

It means for most people
either a passport,

which lots of people don't have,

or a photo ID
plus a birth certificate,

which also lots of people don't have.

Second, there's
a voter ID requirement.

It's a very strict one.

It's stricter than any voter ID

requirement in any state
except, I think, one.

It would require voters
to produce a valid driver's license

or a non-driver ID issued by the DMV,

a passport, a military ID,
and certain tribal IDs.

Note that there are many forms of ID

that people commonly
have that are not on that list,

including student IDs.

If you vote by mail, which I used
to do in Washington State,

some states have almost
entirely vote by mail,

you have to include
a photocopy of your qualifying ID.

Third, there is a state and federal
information sharing provision.

It requires states
to send their voter rolls

to the federal government in order

to have them checked
for potential non-citizens.

That will lead to periodic
purges of voter rolls.

Then there are criminal penalties

for election officials
who allow voter

registration without the qualifying

documentary proof of citizenship.

A lot going on there.

Each one of those
is tremendously significant.

Jill, what problem do the proponents

of this law say
they're trying to solve?

This legislation is aimed
at a problem that doesn't exist.

The theoretical problem
is non-citizens attempting

to vote in US elections,

but every study
that's ever been done suggests

that is a vanishingly
rare phenomenon.

For instance,
there was this 2016 study.

They asked electors in 12 states
covering 23.5 million votes,

"How many incidents did you have

of non-citizens attempting to vote?"

There were 30 incidents,
which is 0.001%.

I'll just say
many of those incidents,

maybe even most of them,
the person is confused.

It's election.

They think they can vote
and they don't realize.

It's not some malicious plot.

It raises all kinds of issues.

We're going to try and go
through a bunch of them.

I wanted to start, though,
with the constitutional stakes.

Jill, you've talked in other places

about some of the core
constitutional concerns

that you believe
the legislation raises.

What stand out to you

as the biggest potential
constitutional problems here?

Unfortunately, as the Supreme Court

has interpreted the Constitution,

the arguments aren't as strong
as they might be.

I actually want to start in 1875 with
a case called Minor v. Happersett.

Virginia Minor was the head
of women's suffrage in Missouri.

After the 14th Amendment was

a bitter disappointment
for women's suffragists.

They had hoped to be
enfranchised explicitly,

they weren't.

Virginia Minor and other
suffragists came up

with this new idea,
which is they claim,

"We're citizens.
One of the inherent rights

of US citizenship
is the right to vote."

They go to the Supreme Court.

Her husband is her lawyer.

He's also a feminist, so
it's also a feminist marriage story.

The Supreme Court agrees
that women are citizens,

so okay, that's something,
but say there's no right

to vote inherent in citizenship.

Minor v. Happersett,
which is entangled

in anti-suffragist reasoning,
remains the law to this day.

There is no affirmative right
to vote in the US Constitution.

There are certain reasons

for disenfranchisement
which are unconstitutional,

like the 15th Amendment prohibits

race-based disenfranchisement.

The 19th Amendment prohibits
sex-based disenfranchisement,

but there's not an affirmative right

to vote in the Constitution,

which I think many people
are surprised to learn.

Sure.

When you look at
the constitutional issues

that you could raise about this bill,

we talked a little bit about
equal protection concerns,

do you see equal protection
concerns in the SAVE Act?

I have enormous equal protection
concerns about the SAVE Act.

It would disproportionately
disenfranchise women

and people of color.

Unfortunately, the way
the Supreme Court has interpreted

the 14th Amendment makes it very hard
to pursue those claims in court.

The Supreme Court has interpreted
the constitutional guarantee

of equality very narrowly
to really focus on statutes

that explicitly distinguish

based on race or sex
or some protected class.

If a law is facially neutral,
as this law is,

it never uses the word sex or race,

the court says, "We'll
only apply some heightened

level of scrutiny if you can show

the law was passed
basically because of animus,

not simply in spite of,

but in part because
of its adverse effects."

Realistically, it is very hard to get
that kind of documentary evidence.

Malice, so the court would apply
a very low level of scrutiny,

which is called
rational basis review.

Basically, could any legislature
think this was reasonable?

Yes, they're really concerned about

those 30 out of 12 million cases.

It's harder to challenge
it constitutionally

than you would think.

Sure.

As is often the case,

the difference between
the intent requirement

and the effect requirement
makes a huge difference

in a constitutional argument.

Yes.

I think this legislation
is a huge and powerful example

of the downsides
of the court's narrow focus

on explicitly sex-based or race-based
legislation and decision

to essentially ignore
facial and neutral action.

Let's move to that point exactly
now because among the groups

that could potentially
be disproportionately

affected by these requirements,
as you said, are women.

Maybe you can start off by explaining

a little bit about
why that would be the case.

As Charlotte discussed,
there's a variety

of ways you can establish
your citizenship.

Some people have a passport.

Some people have an expensive
and special driver's license

that confers US citizenship,

but your ordinary driver's
license is not sufficient.

You have to supplement
an ordinary driver's license

with some other proof.

For instance, you could supplement it

under the statute with
a certified birth certificate.

First thing I'll say, it has
to be certified with a stamp on it.

Also, the name
on the birth certificate

has to match the name
on your driver's license.

There was a recent survey,
2023, 80% of women

in different sex marriages
take their husband's name,

an additional 5% hyphenate,

meaning 85% of married
women don't have birth certificates

that match their driver's license.

That whole route
to establishing citizenship

is just not available
disproportionately to women.

You've talked about how many women

don't have driver's licenses
and birth certificates that match.

More broadly, what kinds of scale
are we talking about about women

and others lacking
the right documentation

to satisfy those requirements?

There was a national
survey that found 9.1%

of US citizens of voting age,

which translates
into 21.3 million people,

lack ready access to one
of the documents that's required.

At least 3.8 million people

simply don't have those documents.

There's no way to get
those documents.

This statute would effectively
disenfranchise millions of Americans.

I guess the follow-up question
is there are probably patterns

in the kinds of people who find
themselves in those situations.

Yes.

For instance, the same survey found

that 11% of American citizens

of color would be unable
to find these documents.

For white Americans,
in contrast, the figure was 8%.

One immediate way
to think about it is about half

of Americans have passports.

They're disproportionately wealthy.

Passports are expensive,
and you usually get them

because you're going
on an international trip,

which costs a lot of money.

Sure.

We've been talking about voting,

which is the asserted
goal of the SAVE Act,

but that's not the only place
where documentation matters.

How do you see the narratives here

overlapping with
your area of specialty,

work law and employment law?

One big-picture answer
is that the same narratives

are at work here
as are at work when people claim

that immigration hurts US workers.

In both situations,
we are seeing similar scapegoating

of immigrants for social problems,

including imaginary social problems.

That is the thing
with the SAVE Act, especially.

In the work context,
you've probably heard people

make the claim that
Americans would get paid

more if immigrants
weren't competing for jobs.

That is not true, but it doesn't mean

that can't sound convincing
or convince people

in the moment to support
anti-immigration policies.

Another parallel is
the deployment of that narrative

as a purported justification
for other policy initiatives.

Things like revoking
work authorizations

or making it harder for universities

to admit non-US students.

Small scale, there is also just
this really direct parallel

that asks what should have to happen
for somebody to prove

authorization to do something,
to work or to vote.

In the employment context,
that often looks

like a policy debate
about whether employers

should have to use a system called

E-Verify in addition
to the normal document check

that you've probably done

when you started
a job where you fill out

an I-9 and your employer
photocopies your documents.

About half of states require

E-Verify for some or all employers.

In the Trump administration,

we're seeing a push, both to mandate

that more employers use E-Verify,

but also the same
administration claiming

that E-Verify isn't very accurate

and there is still
this problem with people

working without authorization.

Note the tension.

In the Trump administration,

we are seeing both a push
to have employers use E-Verify,

but also claims
that E-Verify isn't effective

and that there are big problems

with non-authorized workers working.

The tension there, obviously,

is something that is being
used to ratchet up

the pressure on or a push towards

a more restrictive
immigration policy.

I wonder how
the documentary requirements

in the SAVE Act compare
to those that exist in work law,

both the papers you have to bring
and then the possibility

of using this E-Verify
database afterwards.

The SAVE Act is much stricter

than what is required
in the workplace context.

Among other reasons,
there are lots of non-citizens

who are authorized to work in the US.

The SAVE Act imposes
just a really significant hurdle

in terms of the restrictions

on the specific kinds
of documents you can use.

We've talked about
the participation in civic life

that comes with the ability to vote

and the ways it might be restricted.

Those kinds of requirements
sound like they would restrain

participation in economic life.

What kind of broader
economic consequences

do those kinds of issues raise

in the economy as we were talking
about in the democracy?

Well, I would say
that the economic realm

and the democratic realm
are really closely linked here.

One likelihood, and one thing
I think we're already seeing,

is that the Trump
administration's crackdown

on immigration is making
immigrant workers fearful,

afraid to poke their head up,

both because of just,
for unauthorized workers,

the possibility
of immigration enforcement,

and even for authorized workers,

the possibility
that the administration

will revoke their authorizations.

We've seen that in the context

of the administration's what is often

called the ideological
deportation policy,

where workers have their work
authorization revoked

because of something
they've expressed on social media

that the administration
disagrees with.

Likewise, the possibility
of maybe reasonless

revocation of work authorization
for individual workers

or groups of workers.

Given all that, you can
understand why somebody

would be afraid to say,
"I am being paid

less than the minimum wage,"

which is an absolutely
rampant problem,

especially among employers
of unauthorized immigrants.

Also, is an immigrant worker,
whether authorized or not,

going to be willing
to join a union or to work

collectively with their colleagues

to solve some kind
of workplace problem

if they are afraid
that their employer will call

immigration enforcement and try

to have their work authorization

revoked or try to have them deported?

There's a really direct link there,

I think, between economic
and civic life.

Sometimes people call
unions schools of democracy.

It's really common
for workers who are active

in their unions to go on to be active

in US political life in other ways.

There's a real cost
there that straddles the economy

and our broader
participatory democracy.

Right.

I want to underscore
and clarify one thing

that's latent in your answer there.

You might think of this as a binary.

You either are authorized to work

in the US or you're not authorized
to work in the US.

I think an important part

of what you're saying
is there's lots of people

who have authorization
to work in the US,

but that is insecure
or is contingent in certain ways.

The chilling effect
that you're talking

about really would affect lots
of people who are otherwise

currently authorized
to work, wouldn't it?

Exactly.

Yes.

The fear is, "If I come
to the attention of the authorities,

they'll try to revoke
my work authorization."

Right.

It just goes without saying,
but I'll say it anyway,

this is obviously going
to affect immigrants,

which is also going
to have a disproportionate

racial and national origin
effect in various ways.

Absolutely.

When you look at all
of this workforce participation issue

that you're talking about,

that could also have some economic
ramifications, I suppose.

Yes, absolutely.

The notion that immigration is bad

for US workers just isn't born out.

I'm not a labor economist,

but I follow a bunch of them
on social media, I guess.

Next best thing.

They broadly agree
that immigration grows the economy,

that it does not meaningfully
harm the wages of US workers,

that immigrants hold up

the childcare
and home health sectors,

which have a host
of important ripple effects

for both immigrant
and US citizen workers.

Immigrants help revitalize stagnant

or declining towns and cities.

In particular,
since we're in Minnesota,

Operation Metro Surge was very bad

for our economy
here in the Twin Cities.

There is a recent report
from North Star Policy Action,

estimates $106 million in lost
wages in the Twin Cities alone.

Think about the ripple
effects that has.

That $106 million in lost
wages didn't then get

circulated in the economy
as workers bought things.

They bought groceries

or bought restaurant
meals or paid their rent.

Workers who aren't being
paid or not spending

and people who
are depending on daycare

or elder care to be able to go
work themselves

can't if it's not available.

First and foremost,

Operation Metro Surge
was a moral travesty,

but also the economic
effects are real and ongoing.

I don't suppose

there's any constitutional
argument there either, Jill?

Well, unfortunately,

the Supreme Court has
interpreted immigration law

to give Congress
what they call plenary

authority over immigration.

Even actually like an explicitly
racist immigration law,

the Supreme Court has never gone back

and said that is unconstitutional.

I feel like that has
long been a simmering

problem in American
constitutional law,

and maybe it's come to the forefront
a little more at this moment.

That's one thing I want to say.

The second thing I want to say

is a lot of immigration
enforcement, at least,

is in the form of facial neutrality.

Even if the court was more interested

in challenging the constitutionality

of immigration rules,
if it keeps its lock on explicit,

say, race discrimination,

that's often not
in the language of the statute.

Sure.

Do you have any sense of assuming
that the SAVE Act were to pass,

which it's unclear
whether it can right now,

but if it did pass,
would you anticipate,

notwithstanding the obstacles,

that there would be legal
challenges to it?

I'm sure there are going
to be legal challenges.

Even under the Supreme
Court's stilted

view of the equal
protection argument,

it's possible to argue
that it was motivated by animus.

I suspect the response
will be it was motivated

by this concern with voter fraud,

or even with a concern
for partisan advantage.

The Supreme Court has said
in a number of voting cases,

"Well, if you were just
trying to win for your party,

that's okay, because that's
not race discrimination."

One of the ironies of the SAVE Act

is that Republicans
are mainly pushing it.

It's actually not clear

that it would disproportionately
benefit Republicans.

Time will tell.

There are some Republican
opponents in Congress,

I think, that are very focused on it.

It's not actually clear who's
going to have the advantage.

We've talked about women
and we've talked about immigrants,

but another population sometimes

indicated as having difficulties

with these kinds of documentation

requirements are older people, right?

Older people.

Also, there's a huge class bias,

which the Supreme Court is not
interested in constitutionally.

Clearly, when you think
about who has a passport,

who has ready access to these,
a lot of that is about

having financial and just human
capital resources to negotiate

the bureaucracy
and to have the time to do it.

Rural voters as well, right?

Lisa Murkowski has
been publicly opposing

the SAVE Act because
for many Alaskans,

they'll have to fly in order
to be able to register to vote,

to be able to present
their documents in person.

Right, because of how
far-flung Alaska is

and there's places
that don't have any roads at all.

The voting by mail
has an effect disproportionately

on certain kinds of voters.

Rural and older voters
might be some of those.

We've talked about
economic participation.

We've talked about
the immigration ramifications.

We've talked about
the gender ramifications

of these kinds
of documentary requirements,

whether in the SAVE
Act or in other laws.

In some ways,
this is about who belongs

in the American polity, I suppose.

How do you think about this question
against some of the larger questions

of discrimination and participation

that each of you studies?

Is this of a piece with lots
of other things you see?

Is this a departure
in a more challenging direction?

To me, one of the strains
of American history

is we have a long
history of conflicts

over voting and voter suppression.

This is very much of a piece.

I think America does
have a voting problem,

but our main voting problem
is not enough citizens vote.

In the last presidential election,

only 73.6% of the voting
age population was registered.

Only 65.3% voted.

To me, it's very much of a piece.

There's a long history
of voter suppression,

but it goes in exactly
the wrong direction.

To the extent we want
to change voting laws,

it should be trying
to get that number up

to 100% so every US citizen votes.

How about you, Charlotte?

I think we are at a moment
of intense backlash politics

against the idea of America
as an inclusive democracy.

The push for the Save Act

is a particularly acute instance

of that backlash politics.

When you think about this,

where's the path
to the future for people who,

like you, have a lot
of concerns about

these kinds of policy
interventions around identification,

documentation, identity, belonging?

Where's the energy for the future

to respond to what you're describing,

Charlotte, as backlash politics?

I think there has been quite a bit

of resistance to the Save Act.

What I'd like to say
is the way to be certain

you're going to lose is to give up.

The only thing
to do is to keep pushing.

I think there's been quite a bit
of pushback to the Save Act.

It's been pretty effective
so far in getting the message out

this is not a technical amendment,

but this is really about
disenfranchising

literally millions of US citizens.

What do you think, Charlotte?

I was going to say
something very similar,

that when people learn
what the Save Act does,

they mostly hate it.

That seems to be
a silver lining here.

When you ask people
a question that sort of sounds in,

"Do you believe in democracy?

Do you believe
that people who are eligible

to vote should be able to vote?"

they mostly think the answer is yes.

Which has two potential implications.

One is the Save Act might not pass.

It does not seem
to have the votes as of now.

Number two, it might be the seeds

of some of the future
thinking about democracy

that both of you would hope for.

I certainly hope that people,
if they don't like the Save Act,

not only do they call
their congressman,

but what a good reason
to vote this year, right?

That'll show them.

That'll show them.

I just want to step back and do

what we often do at the end
of these episodes

so far and just ask
people to synthesize

what we've been talking
about as one big picture point.

As you look at the Save
Act itself in particular,

but also all the broad implications

we've teased out about
discrimination, about belonging,

about what this says
about our politics now,

if we were going
to have our listeners

walk away with one big thought,

what do you think
you'd have them walk away with?

The most important issue
facing us today

is whether we commit
ourselves to being an inclusive,

interracial democracy
or whether we turn

away from that vision of America.

Well, it's clear that
the Save Act raises

fundamental questions
that go well beyond its borders,

well beyond voting,
about what it takes

to be recognized and included
in the American society.

I want to thank my
extraordinary colleagues,

Jill Hasday and Charlotte Garden.

I appreciate you both being here.

Thanks to you for listening
to Minnesota Law Now.

Thank you.

Thank you.

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