Thursday, May 07, 2026
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Bill preventing illegal immigrants from driving also impacts state voter ID laws



Four Republican U.S. senators are pushing a bill that would penalize states that issue driverโ€™s licenses, commercial driverโ€™s licenses, or personal identification cards to migrants illegally residing in the country.

โ€œSince many illegal immigrants do not speak English and cannot read road signs, these drivers make roads less safe for the law-abiding public,โ€ Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., the billโ€™s main sponsor, said.

โ€œWhile Wyoming already prohibits illegal immigrants from getting driverโ€™s licenses, 19 states and the District of Columbia continue to issue personal and commercial driverโ€™s licenses without verifying legal status.โ€

The No Licenses for Illegal Drivers or Truckers Act would slash a stateโ€™s annual federal highway funds by 10% if it does not verify the legal status of an applicant before issuing the person an ID or driverโ€™s license.

The federal government would then redirect those withheld funds to states that are in compliance.

โ€œWe must defund woke sanctuary states who continue to put illegal aliens in the driverโ€™s seat and Americans in the back seat,โ€ Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, a cosponsor of the bill, said.

โ€œThis legislation puts Americans first and keeps our roads safe by not only cutting federal highway funding for any state that allows illegal aliens to obtain a state-issued or commercial driverโ€™s license but also redirecting those dollars to states like Texas that actually enforce the law.โ€

The legislation advances the Department of Transportationโ€™s efforts to address a slew of deadly vehicular accidents caused by migrant semitruck drivers โ€“ many of whom had resided in the country illegally โ€“ who could not read English road signs.

Some states, such as California and New York, have resisted the DOT’s reform efforts, which include English language proficiency tests for all commercial drivers.

Though the No Licenses for Illegal Drivers or Truckers Act is marketed as legislation focused on road safety, its targeting of personal IDs as well as driverโ€™s licenses also addresses Republicansโ€™ election security concerns.

The Republican party fears that the relative laxness of many statesโ€™ voter identification requirements enables or could enable widespread election fraud.

Only 36 states require prospective voters to present personal ID to vote, and even those states usually allow people to vote without an ID so long as they sign affidavits or provide mere proof of residency.

The No Licenses for Illegal Drivers or Truckers Act would impact California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, and Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, and Washington.

All of those states allow undocumented residents to obtain driversโ€™ licenses, which can often be used as ID for voting purposes.

Though election officials are supposed to verify votersโ€™ citizenship status on the backend, illegal votes are sometimes already counted before ineligible voters are identified, which happened in Michigan at least 15 times in 2024.

Democrats argue that instances of illegal voting are rare and that stronger proof of citizenship requirements can disenfranchise rural and low-income Americans.

Citing this reason, not a single Senate Democrat supported the SAVE America Act, a House-passed Republican bill that has essentially died in the Senate.

If it reaches the Senate floor for a vote, the No Licenses for Illegal Drivers or Truckers Act will likely receive similar Democratic opposition.

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