If you can’t figure out how to get a new ID, you probably shouldn’t be voting for the President of the United States anyway. Requiring photo identification to cast a ballot is one of the most basic protections for election integrity. Every day Americans show ID to buy alcohol, board airplanes, open bank accounts, and enter federal buildings. Voting, which decides the leadership of the country, should be held to the same reasonable standard.
Claims that voter ID suppresses turnout have been thoroughly debunked. States with strict ID laws consistently show strong participation rates, and free or low-cost identification is available for citizens who need it. The real resistance often comes from activists and organizations that benefit from loose standards that invite fraud, double voting, and ineligible participation. Secure elections demand that only verified, eligible American citizens decide who governs.
Common-sense voter ID laws treat voting with the seriousness it deserves. They restore public confidence in results and ensure that every legal vote counts while preventing illegal ones from diluting them. President Trump and millions of Americans understand that protecting the ballot box is not discrimination—it is fundamental to maintaining a legitimate republic. No citizen should accept anything
