SAVE Act and legal names

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From what I understand, if the SAVE act was to become law, many women who took their husband’s last name after marriage would not be able to vote because their birth certificate name would not match their current driver’s license or state issued ID.

My confusion here is, when you change your name after marriage (for example, changing it through social security and then through state ID) isn’t that your new legal name? Of course it wouldn’t match your birth name, nor should it. for accurate record keeping.

What is considered a correct, legal avenue of name change that satisfies the SAVE act? I’ve heard a passport is OK but that would have your new name as well, right? To me, that doesn’t make any more sense than a state ID. Especially since the states control the voting process; not the federal government.

Just looking for straight forward answers please. I already have the bias covered by my own views.

Edit: I asked specifically about married women, but I presume this would affect ANYONE who changed their name, for whatever reason, after birth?

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6 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Under the SAVE Act, as I understand it, you would be required to show proof of citizenship to vote. A passport would count, along with a few other IDs.

However, if you did not have a passport, you would need to show other proofs of citizenship, including birth certificate. For people with a name change, you would need to show your birth certificate, your current ID, and the name change forms that show both your new name and your birth name.

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