By Charles C. W. Cooke
Monday, April 20, 2026
Perhaps determined to confirm once and for all that there
is no longer such a thing as a moderate Democrat, the famed political
strategist James Carville recently advised his party that if they obtain a
trifecta in Washington, D.C., in 2028, they should try to abolish American
politics. “If the Democrats win the presidency and both houses of Congress,”
Carville proposed, “I think on day one, they should make Puerto Rico and D.C. a
state, and they should expand the Supreme Court to 13. F*** it. Eat our dust.”
These ideas did not occur to Carville ex nihilo. Still,
it is rather jarring to hear them from someone who once insisted that “to be a
contrarian, you’ve got to be a contrarian against your own people.” At best,
Carville is engaging in cheap fan service for his own people. At worst, he has
become as unhinged as they are. If indulged, the course of action that he
endorses would break our politics and cause dysfunction that would take decades
to fix. Does the man have nobody at home who can dig him gently in the ribs?
That Carville has gone down this road is ominous — not
least because it suggests that, if the Democrats give in to their worst
instincts the next time they enjoy uniform power, all manner of supposedly
respectable figures are likely to go along. Undoubtedly, the press will be
among them. In theory, our journalists exist to push back against this sort of
Jacobinism. In practice, they are sympathetic to the ends and therefore
indulgent of the means. If it comes to it, they will mislead, euphemize,
downplay, and create false equivalences, such that contextualized debate
becomes impossible. The Democrats’ press releases will be echoed in the
newspapers verbatim. The party’s activists will be presented as analysts. And,
at all junctures, we will hear the infants’ retort: They started it!
That will all be nonsense. There is a reason that James
Carville followed up his proposition with the counsel “don’t run on it, don’t
talk about it, just do it,” and it is not that the “it” in question represents
quotidian American politics. On the contrary: “F*** it” is the motto of the man
who has abandoned discipline, while “Eat our dust” is an adage for the
presbyopic. Only once in American history has a president attempted to
do what Carville is recommending, and the result was a rebuke from his own supermajority party that has echoed
throughout the ages. Court-packing, wrote the chairman of the House Rules
Committee, represented “the most terrible threat to constitutional government
that has arisen in the entire history of the country.” His equivalent on the
Senate Judiciary Committee went one further, submitting that the idea “violates
every sacred tradition of American democracy,” corrupts “all precedents in the
history of our government,” and “should be so emphatically rejected that its
parallel will never again be presented to the free representatives of the free
people of America.”
Quite so. To achieve their ends, the Democrats would be
required to dispense with a trio of fundamental norms. They would have to
abolish the filibuster, which has obtained in its true form since 1837. They
would have to add seats to the United States Supreme Court, which has had nine
members since 1869. And they would have to add states without bipartisan
buy-in, which has not been done since 1890. This would change all three
branches in one fell swoop. It would change the Court by turning it into an explicitly
political body. It would change the Senate by adding four new members and
reducing the threshold to a simple majority. And it would change the presidency
by remaking the Electoral College.
To justify those moves, the Democrats would presumably
insist that the Republicans have committed crimes of an equal nature. But that
is absurd. Twice in recent memory, Republicans in the Senate have been
pressured to abolish the filibuster by a president of their own party, and
twice they have refused to do so. Neither, despite winning a trifecta, have
they added states or packed the Supreme Court. Certainly, Republican senators
have filled the Court — first by refusing to acquiesce to a nominee whom
the majority disliked, and then by approving three nominees whom the majority
favored. But they have not packed it, tried to pack it, or approximated packing
it in any way. To pretend that the Senate picking judges during a vacancy is
the same as Congress adding judges so that its majority party can achieve its
preferred political outcomes is to stretch the English language to its breaking
point. “F*** it,” indeed.
The lesson of the past two decades ought to have been
that cynical, outlandish, and arrogant political gestures have a tendency to
repel the public and push it back toward the party that it just rejected.
President Biden became extremely unpopular after he allowed himself to be
persuaded that he was Franklin Delano Roosevelt. President Trump’s second-term
“vibe shift” was peremptorily curtailed by his preposterous experiment with
tariffs. In Virginia, Abigail Spanberger has become the most unpopular recently
inaugurated governor in the state’s history, after she traded her “security
mom” campaign mien for an electoral power grab that would have made Huey Long
blush. In 2028, the Democrats have a chance to break the cycle — but to take
it, they’ll need a leader who is willing to be a contrarian against his own
people.
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