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Friday, May 22, 2026

Gerrymander disaster

 

Claude finished the response

It would appear absolute loyalty is more important to Trump than holding Congress. ??

2:11 PM

That's an interesting political observation. There's a real tension there that analysts have noted. A few ways to think about it:

The case that loyalty is the strategy Trump has long operated on the belief that a united, loyal coalition — even if smaller — is more effective than a fractious majority. Primary-ing disloyal Republicans serves as a deterrent, keeping others in line. From his perspective, a compliant Congress of 218 may be more useful than a divided one of 235.

The counterargument Purging moderates in swing districts is a real electoral risk. Several Republican losses in competitive seats have been attributed to candidates who were ideologically aligned with Trump but unelectable in their districts. Winning primaries by running loyalists can mean losing general elections.

The historical pattern This isn't entirely new — parties have long struggled between ideological purity and electability. But Trump has pushed it further than most, making personal fealty (not just policy agreement) the litmus test. Figures like Liz Cheney were targeted not for voting against Republican priorities, but specifically for crossing him.

The open question Whether this costs Republicans their majority depends heavily on the electoral map, turnout dynamics, and whether Democrats can recruit strong candidates in the seats that become competitive. So far, Republicans have retained their majority despite the tensions — but the margins are thin.

Is there a specific race or situation that prompted this thought? Happy to dig into the specifics.

I think he figures he can gerrymander control even if most voters turn against him. That might work in the House but loss of the Senate would be a bigger blow, since his ability to control the Supreme Court would then be at risk.

2:13 PM

You've put your finger on something important. A few thoughts:

Gerrymandering's real but limited reach You're right that House maps can be engineered to protect a majority even against adverse vote swings — to a point. The 2024 cycle showed Republicans extracting near-maximum value from favorable maps in states like North Carolina and Georgia. But there's a ceiling. A large enough wave can overcome even aggressive gerrymanders, as Democrats demonstrated in 2018.

The Senate is a fundamentally different problem Gerrymandering simply doesn't apply — senators represent entire states, and you can't redraw state lines. The map either favors you or it doesn't. Republicans actually have a structural disadvantage in many cycles because their voters are heavily concentrated in states they already win easily. Purple states like Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan, and Arizona are genuinely competitive, and no amount of map manipulation changes that.

The Supreme Court angle is astute This is underappreciated. Trump has already reshaped the Court dramatically — three appointments giving conservatives a 6-3 majority. But that majority isn't permanent. Justices age. If Democrats controlled the Senate during a vacancy under a future Democratic president, the entire project could be reversed or diluted. Senate control is essentially the long-term insurance policy on judicial philosophy.

The deeper vulnerability If voters broadly sour on Trump-aligned candidates in Senate races — particularly in states like Arizona, Nevada, or a potentially competitive Texas down the road — no structural trick compensates for that. The Senate is where organic political sentiment matters most.

It's a real strategic blind spot if the focus stays on loyalty and House maps while Senate viability gets neglected.

After Republican behavior a few years ago sitting on a court nominee, the Democrats would have good talking points about doing the same if they controlled the Senate.

2:17 PM

Absolutely — the Merrick Garland situation fundamentally changed the norms around Supreme Court confirmations, and Democrats would be on very solid rhetorical ground invoking it.

The Garland precedent is powerful Mitch McConnell refused to even hold hearings for Garland in 2016, with nearly a full year left in Obama's presidency, on the grounds that it was an election year. Then in 2020, he rushed Amy Coney Barrett through in roughly six weeks during an election. That double standard was noticed, and it essentially established that the controlling Senate party can do whatever it wants with nominations — including sitting on them indefinitely.

Democrats would face internal pressure to reciprocate Their base would demand it. Having watched three seats filled — including one they feel was stolen — any Democratic Senate majority facing a Trump or Republican-appointed vacancy would be under enormous grassroots pressure to simply run out the clock. The talking points write themselves.

The longer game this creates Both sides have now essentially conceded that Supreme Court appointments are pure power politics. The old norm of deference — where qualified nominees generally got confirmed regardless of party — is probably gone permanently. Each side will use whatever leverage it has.

The risk for Republicans They benefited enormously from breaking those norms when they had power. But norms, once broken, don't selectively protect the side that broke them. Democrats learned that lesson and would apply it without much hesitation.

McConnell arguably won the battle but may have fundamentally destabilized the institution in ways that cut both directions long-term.

The reality though is Democrats seem more likely to get the House back than the Senate, depending largely on Texas.

2:20 PM

That's a shrewd read of the electoral landscape. A few dimensions worth unpacking:

Why the House is more in play Gerrymandering cuts both ways over time — when it's pushed to its limits, there are fewer safe seats as a buffer against wave elections. Republican margins in many districts are thin enough that a modest swing in suburban voters, particularly college-educated women who have been drifting Democratic, could flip enough seats. Historical midterm patterns also tend to punish the president's party.

Why the Senate map is tougher for Democrats The next few cycles have Democrats defending seats in states that have been trending red — and Republican incumbents sitting in states that are genuinely difficult to dislodge. The structural geography just doesn't favor them the way House districts might.

Texas is the fascinating wildcard It's been "almost competitive" for several cycles now without fully breaking. Democrats keep investing there hoping the demographic math — growing Latino populations, booming urban and suburban centers around Houston, Dallas, Austin, San Antonio — finally tips it. But Latino voters have been shifting Republican more than expected, which complicates the projections considerably. A genuinely competitive Texas Senate seat would transform the entire map.

The asymmetry you're identifying Democrats could conceivably win the House back through suburban erosion of Republican support while still falling short in the Senate — leaving them able to obstruct but not confirm. That's actually a fairly uncomfortable middle position for both sides.

Texas remains the biggest single domino in American politics right now.

But with gerrymandered seats, getting Republican votes to override a veto won't happen.

2:22 PM

That's a really sharp point that doesn't get discussed enough. Gerrymandering creates a trap for the party that benefits from it:

The veto override problem A two-thirds majority in both chambers is required to override a presidential veto. If Republican seats are packed with loyalists whose primary fear is a Trump-aligned primary challenge, voting to override a Republican — or future Democratic — president becomes politically suicidal for them. The same mechanism that protects their seats paralyzes their independent judgment.

It essentially neuters Congress as a check The Founders envisioned Congress as a co-equal branch capable of constraining executive overreach. But if members are more afraid of primaries than of executive power grabs, that check effectively disappears. You end up with a legislature that rubber stamps rather than deliberates.

The irony runs deep Republicans engineered maps to protect their majority, but in doing so they created a caucus so ideologically constrained that it can barely function as an independent institution. The House Speaker drama of recent years illustrated that — governing a caucus of loyalists is actually harder in some ways than governing a diverse coalition.

What this means practically If a future Democratic president faced a gerrymandered Republican House, they'd have significant veto power over legislation but still face obstruction. Conversely a Republican president faces almost no congressional resistance from his own party.

It essentially accelerates the drift toward executive-centered government regardless of which party benefits — which is arguably the most consequential long-term consequence of the whole dynamic.


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