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Young Democrat Congressman Shocked That Everyone at a Black Church Has a Driver's License

If Republicans were smart, they'd play this clip everywhere, all the time.

Democrats have spent years warning that voter ID laws amount to a new era of voter suppression — a modern-day Jim Crow designed to disenfranchise minority communities. But a viral moment from a black church in Alabama is raising some uncomfortable questions about that narrative.

Representative Shomari Figures, a Democrat, recently stood before a Black congregation and posed a pointed question: how many of you do not have a driver’s license? He likely expected the moment to underscore the supposed burden that voter ID requirements place on Black Americans. Instead, not a single hand went up.

It was the kind of unscripted moment that cuts through months of political messaging. Nobody in the room — in a Black church in the Deep South, exactly the community Democrats claim would be most harmed by voter ID laws — lacked basic identification.

This brings us to the SAVE America Act, or the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act, which would require proof of citizenship to register to vote in federal elections. Supporters argue it is a commonsense measure to ensure that only American citizens are participating in American elections. Opponents have branded it Jim Crow 2.0, insisting it will erect barriers that prevent eligible voters — particularly minorities — from casting ballots.

But the data tells a different story. Studies consistently show that the vast majority of Americans, across all demographics, already possess some form of government-issued identification. Many states that have implemented voter ID laws also offer free state ID cards to any resident who needs one. The barriers that critics describe are, in most cases, either minimal or already addressed.

The Jim Crow comparison is worth examining on its merits, too. Jim Crow laws were a deliberate, state-sponsored system of racial terror — literacy tests designed to be impossible to pass, poll taxes calibrated to exclude the poor, and outright violence against those who tried to register. Requiring the same ID that Americans already use to board a plane, buy alcohol, open a bank account, or pick up a prescription is a categorically different thing.

Figures’ church moment isn’t just an awkward political anecdote. It reflects what polling has shown for years: voter ID laws are broadly popular across racial and partisan lines. Voters across the country — including a majority of Black voters in numerous surveys — support requiring identification at the polls. The political class pushing the Jim Crow 2.0 framing appears increasingly out of step with the very communities it claims to represent.

The debate over election integrity is real and worth having. But it should be grounded in reality — and the reality is that nearly every American who is legally eligible to vote either already has an ID or can readily obtain one.