The New National Citizenship Database:
An Interactive Look:
What is this new system?
This section outlines the new system's architecture and capabilities. The Trump administration, in conjunction with the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), has developed a new, searchable data system by significantly expanding an existing tool.
System Expansion
The new system was created by integrating two separate government databases:
SAVE
The existing immigration verification tool from DHS.
Social Security (SSA)
Data from the Social Security Administration.
New National Citizenship System
A New Capability
This integration is significant because it allows the system to check the citizenship status of virtually any American, including U.S.-born citizens, for the first time, a major expansion from its original purpose of verifying immigrant status.
What is the Stated Purpose?
The administration has provided a specific reason for this new tool's development. This section details that stated goal.
The primary purpose of the system, according to the administration, is to allow state and local election officials to verify that only U.S. citizens are on voter rolls. This is driven by the administration's stated priority of addressing noncitizen voting.
What are the Core Concerns?
Privacy and legal experts have expressed significant alarm over the database. This section explores the three primary areas of concern, which you can explore via the chart or the tabs below.
Privacy & Surveillance
Experts warn of a "surveillance nightmare." The system represents an unprecedented consolidation of sensitive personal information into a single, centralized, and searchable repository. There are fears it could be used for purposes far beyond verifying voter eligibility.
Accuracy & Disenfranchisement
The accuracy of the tool is unknown. Critics are concerned that it could mistakenly disenfranchise eligible voters by incorrectly flagging them as noncitizens. This raises questions about its reliability for a process as critical as elections.
Legality & Transparency
The database was reportedly developed quickly and without public transparency. Legal experts doubt the administration followed the required federal laws for creating new data systems that contain Americans' personal information, which normally mandate public scrutiny.
