Trump, Speaker Johnson Meet Amid Voter ID, Housing Standoff

www.newsmax.com

President Donald Trump met with House Speaker Mike Johnson at the White House on Thursday afternoon as Republican leaders work to end a legislative standoff that has brought House business to a standstill and intensified the party's push to advance election legislation.

The meeting took place a day after Trump abruptly canceled a planned signing ceremony for the bipartisan 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act, saying Senate Republicans must first prioritize passage of the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility, or SAVE America Act, which would require voters to provide proof of U.S. citizenship and additional identification to participate in federal elections.

The president's decision has complicated efforts by House Republican leaders to move forward on multiple legislative priorities while exposing divisions within the GOP over strategy and timing.

As he departed the Capitol for the White House, Johnson acknowledged the challenges facing Republicans, who hold only a narrow House majority.

"We're in an era with small margins and small majorities, and we've got to get things moving," Johnson told reporters.

The dispute has effectively frozen House floor action after Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, R-Fla., led an effort to block legislation from advancing until Congress passes the SAVE America Act.

Although the House previously approved one version of the legislation, it remains stalled in the Senate, where Republicans have acknowledged they currently lack the votes needed to overcome the chamber's 60-vote legislative threshold.

Johnson suggested to reporters Thursday that Republicans could ultimately seek to include election-related provisions in a budget reconciliation package, which can pass the Senate with a simple majority under certain circumstances. However, even some Republican supporters have questioned whether the voting legislation would qualify under the Senate's reconciliation rules.

The speaker also defended Trump's decision to postpone action on the housing measure.

"This is how the process plays out. Sometimes it's slow, it's a grind," he said.

"It's a deliberative legislative body. That's what happens. So keep the faith, we're going to get it all done," Johnson said.

"The president, I believe, is going to sign that bill."

Johnson said Trump delayed signing the bill, that he planned to discuss the matter with the president, and that they would work through the process as they "always do."

Trump delivered the same message during a closed-door meeting with Senate Republicans on Wednesday, according to Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kan.

"The president had one, one clear message: SAVE America Act, SAVE America Act, SAVE America Act. That election integrity is so important to the, to this republic that we need to pass that bill, and everything else pales in comparison to that," Marshall said.

"What he said is that the SAVE America Act is exponentially more important than the housing bill."

Trump's decision to delay signing the housing package has drawn criticism from Democrats and some housing advocates because the legislation passed Congress with broad bipartisan support and is intended to address housing affordability by encouraging additional home construction, easing regulatory barriers, and expanding housing opportunities.

Republican leaders have maintained that Trump still intends to sign the bill after lawmakers resolve the current impasse.

The White House has not publicly detailed what actions, if any, are expected to result from Thursday's meeting between Trump and Johnson.

Theodore Bunker

Theodore Bunker, a Newsmax writer, has more than a decade covering news, media, and politics.

© 2026 Newsmax. All rights reserved.