Trump cancels signing of key US housing bill until Save America Act is passed
The US president is pushing Republicans to pass a set of controversial voting restrictions, as frustration grows within his own party

President Donald Trump cancelled his plan to sign a bipartisan affordable housing bill on Wednesday in an effort to pressure his fellow Republicans to pass a long-stalled package of US national voting restrictions that has aggravated party fissures and shown the limits of his power.
“Today’s Housing News Conference and Signing is hereby cancelled until such time as we pass the desperately needed SAVE AMERICA ACT, which I consider to be a National Emergency,” Trump wrote in a social media post.
Some Republicans indicated it may be a largely symbolic gesture: the housing bill can become law anyway if the president has not signed within 10 days, and lawmakers believe they have enough votes to overcome a presidential veto.
Hours later, Trump made a rare visit to the US Capitol, where he implored his party’s lawmakers to enact the Save America Act, his top legislative priority. The president told reporters he had “a really great meeting” with Republican senators over lunch.
The voting restrictions package would require a photo ID to vote in federal elections and proof of US citizenship to register, while forcing states to turn over their voter registration rolls to the federal government.

Trump’s determination may not be enough to push the Save America Act through.