Rep Brandon Gill: I’ll Be Voting "No" on all Senate Bills - Other Than DHS Funding - Until the Senate Passes the SAVE America Act.
The Senate continues to drag its feet on the SAVE America Act, a straightforward bill that demands real proof of U.S. citizenship before anyone can register to vote in federal elections. Rep. Brandon Gill is taking a stand that every patriot should respect: no more Senate bills get his vote—except critical DHS funding—until this commonsense measure becomes law.
Our elections are the foundation of this republic, and allowing non-citizens to register undermines everything we've fought for. The SAVE Act simply requires documentary evidence like a REAL ID-compliant card, passport, or military records showing U.S. birth. It's not suppression—it's protection against fraud that threatens our sovereignty.
Enough with the excuses and delays. Gill's bold refusal to play along sends a clear message: secure the vote first, or nothing else moves forward. America deserves elections only citizens decide. Stand with him until the Senate acts
The image shows Rep Brandon Gill, a Texas Republican who took office in 2025, under a headline that turns his floor stance into a personal slogan. The promise is absolutist and tailored for share-cards: vote “No” on every Senate bill that reaches the House — except DHS funding — until the Senate passes the SAVE America Act (legislation focused on proof-of-citizenship requirements for voter registration).
Did he say it? Yes — Gill publicly pledged a blanket “No” on Senate-originated bills, with that exception, to pressure Senate action on SAVE. It fits a House tactic during divided government: jam the calendar to force a vote. What the meme look drops is the procedural reality. Linking “No” votes to unrelated Senate bills risks collateral damage (delays, lapses) that may lack a direct path to the stated goal. Democrats oppose SAVE, calling the documentary-proof rules burdensome; supporters say it safeguards elections. Either way, the headline writer adds “BOOM! I Love This.” with a flag emoji, turning a parliamentary hardball into a cheer.
Gill’s stance is real and on the record; the SAVE Act passed the House earlier, stalled in the Senate, and remains a GOP rallying point. The image frames it as purity — no deals, one demand — even as House rules and coalition math make blanket no’s hard to keep. The photo is real; the promise is too; the “this will work” subtext is aspirational.

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