Actor James Woods found out that sometimes, one word can say it all when he posted a meme of a transgender lawmaker.
If there’s one thing Woods loves to do, it’s troll the left. On Monday, he took to X with a meme of Rep. Sarah McBride (D-DE), otherwise known as Tim McBride. While he could have added a witty caption, it turns out that the post didn’t really need it.
Look:
Um… pic.twitter.com/i619Ho2v1g
— James Woods (@RealJamesWoods) February 16, 2026
“The Save Act will harm women voters, like myself,” the image reads. This is not a direct quote from McBride, however, which the lawmaker pointed out in responding to the post.
Something that’s been weird about being in elected office is having people you grew up watching in movies troll you online. Actually, just rewatched Contact yesterday. Good movie.
Also, this quote is fabricated. https://t.co/mt4zechtv3
— Sarah McBride (@SarahEMcBride) February 17, 2026
“Something that’s been weird about being in elected office is having people you grew up watching in movies troll you online. Actually, just rewatched Contact yesterday. Good movie. Also, this quote is fabricated,” the Democrat wrote.
While the quote may not be real (again, it’s a meme), the sentiment surely is. As BizPac Review previously reported, one of the main Democrat talking points against the SAVE Act is that it would disenfranchise female voters.
From claiming that American voters largely don’t have a passport or their own birth certificates to saying women will suffer most due to marital name changes, leftists are pulling out all the stops to defy even their own party’s desire for voter identification requirements.
“Requiring basic ID in order to vote is really popular. A Pew poll from a few months ago showed 83% of Americans, including 71% of your fellow Democrats, support requiring an ID to vote. Why are they wrong?” CNN’s Dana Bash asked House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries earlier in February.
“Well, I haven’t said that they’re wrong. We know that states are the ones who are empowered to conduct elections, and every state should be allowed to decide the best way to proceed to ensure that there’s a free and fair election. Here in New York, there are, in fact, voter identification requirements,” he said, before immediately turning to attack Republicans.
“The question is that what Republicans are trying to do is to engage in clear and blatant voter suppression. They know that if there‘s a free and fair election in November, they‘re going to lose. In fact, Republicans have been losing every single election since Donald Trump was sworn in in January of last year, including most recently, decisively in Texas. And of course, losing all across the country up and down the ballot in the November off-year elections in places like New Jersey or Virginia [or] New York,” he added.
Sen. Adam Schiff (D-CA) had a similar response when asked the same question by Jonathan Karl.
“What you’ve just asked is essentially, Republicans have created distrust of the elections by making claims of non-existent fraud in the elections, and shouldn’t we use the distrust they’ve created in order to enact a voter suppression law, which is the SAVE Act, which would require people to have a birth certificate or passport, documents that millions of Americans don’t have. Almost half the country doesn’t have a passport, and I don’t know where many millions of people would find a birth certificate. So, no,” he said before Karl cut in to clarify.
“Well, I was asking you a different question. Photo ID, because as you know … in one recent Pew poll, 83% of adults support requiring photo ID to vote. 71% of Democrats favor requiring photo ID. Is that something you can support? And if not, why not?” the host asked.
“It’s still going to be something that disenfranchises people that don’t have the proper REAL ID, driver’s license ID, that don’t have the ID necessary to vote, even though they are citizens. This is simply another way to try to suppress the vote,” Schiff claimed.
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